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er
•> i
, . ■ i
>; ' 7 NEW YORK
CONSIDERED AND IMPROVED.
ANNO DOMINI 1695.
■ •**
A DESCRIPTION
OF
THE PROVINCE AND CITY
OF
NEW YORK;
WITH
PLANS OF THE CITY AND SEVERAL FORTS
AS THEY EXISTED IN THE YEAR 1695.
BT THE
REV. JOHN MILLER.
-v
NOW FIRST PRINTED FROM THE ORIGINAL MANUSCRIPT.
(To which is added, a Catalogue of an extensive Collection of Books
relating to America, on sale by the Publisher.)
THOMAS RODD,
No. 9, GREAT NEWPORT STREET, LONDON.
MDCCCXL1U.
> 7 i v \&
v
4^--%^
y
YO^
ADVERTISEMENT.
The following description of New York, as it existed a century
and a half since, fell into the hands of the publisher on the disper-
sion of the library of the late George Chalmers, Esq.
As it contains some curious particulars respecting the state of
society in the province at that time, and is, moreover, of particular
local interest, as giving plans of the town and the several forts in
the province, the publisher thought he would be rendering an
acceptable service to those persons who take an interest in tracing
the rise and growth of the great commercial emporium of the
Western world by causing a few copies to be printed, and thus
preserving it from the chance of being lost or destroyed.
The orthography has been modernized, the pointing amended,
and a few words, obviously necessary to complete the sense, have
been inserted between brackets.
il ADVERTISEMENT.
The author appears to use some peculiar arithmetical notatic
consisting in the employment of a superfluous number of cipher
as page 5, line 4, where 300 and 303 are printed for 30 and 3^
and page 14, where 64000 is used for 64 : these are retained, b^
his obvious meaning is indicated to the reader by inserting the
true numbers within a parenthesis.
It may be further necessary to add, that the author uniformly
uses Canida instead of Canada: this has been changed to the
present usage. All other proper names are given as in the manu-
script.
To the Right Reverend Father in God, Henri/,
Lord Bishop of London.
My Lord.
After having been very near three years resident in the pro-
vince of New York, in America, as Chaplain to his Majesty's forces
there, and by living in the Fort of New York, and constantly
attending the Governor, had the opportunity of observing many
things of considerable consequence in relation to the Christians and
Indians, inhabitants thereof, or bordering thereon, and also taken
the draughts of all the cities, towns, forts and churches of any note
within the same, with particular accounts of the number of our In-
dians, the strength of Canada, and way thither, and several other
matters which would have enabled me to give an exact account of
the present estate of that province and the methods proper to be
used for the correcting certain evils therein, and advantaging thereof,
principally as to religious affairs, — I was (obliged so to do by seve-
ral weighty motives, especially those of my private concerns) re-
turning home with them in July last, when being met and set upon
by a French privateer and made his prisoner, I was obliged to
cause them all to be thrown overboard, lest I should have given
intelligence to an enemy to the ruine of the province, instead of a
friendly information to the advantaging thereof. But having had
time by my long imprisonment, and leisure also sufficient, I thought
1 could not better employ them than by endeavouring to retrieve
iv DEDICATION.
some part of what I had lost, and put it in such a method as might
testify the earnest desire I have to promote the glory of God, the
service of my sovereign, and the benefit of my country. What I
have been able to do through God's assistance, the help of my
memory, and certain knowledge I had of things, your Lordship will
find in the following sheets ; which, however weak and imperfect,
as it must needs be, I humbly present to your Lordship as an evi-
dence of my duty and gratitude ; submitting it to your wise in-
spection and serious consideration, either to be further improved if
it seem proper for the end it is designed, or rejected if it be un-
worthy of any respect. Intreating your Lordship to pardon what
faults and blemishes shall be found therein, and heartily praying
that the Giver of all good things would bless your Lordship with
health, and prosperity and success in all your affairs, I make bold
in all duty to subscribe myself,
My Lord,
Your Lordship's most faithful,
And humble servant,
JOHN MILLER.
NEW YORK CONSIDERED.
CHAPTER I.
OF THE PROVINCE OF NEW YORK.
The province of New York is a country very pleasant and de-
lightful, and well improved for the time it has been settled and
the number of its inhabitants. It lies in the latitudes of 40 and 41
and for the longitude is situated between the 300th and 303d (30th
and 33d) degree north ; is in breadth, where broadest, from the east
to the west, about 200 miles, and in length, north and south, about
250, being bounded on the east by New England, on the west by
New Jersey and the Indian country, on the north by the Indian
country, and on the south by the ocean. It lies almost exactly in the
middle of the English plantations, which altogether have of sea coast,
more or less improved by the English, both eastward and westward,
near 250 leagues. This province whereof I speak consists partly
of islands and partly of the main land: the islands of greater
consideration are three, New York Island, Staten Island, and
Nassau (formerly Long) Island; the two former make, each of
them, a county, the first of New York, the second of Richmond.
On Nassau Island are three counties ; for the western end is King's
County, the middle Queen's County, and the eastern part Suffolk
County : to these do belong several, other smaller islands, which,
being at best but so many farms, are not worthy consideration. On
the main land are likewise five counties, namely, West Chester,
Orange, Dutchess, Ulster, and Albany, equal in number to, but
not so well planted, improved, and peopled, as the former. The
places of strength are chiefly three ; the city of New York, the city
of Albany, and the town of Kingstone, in Ulster.
The city of New York, more largely taken, is the whole island so
called, and is in length sixteen miles, in breadth six, and in circum-
ference forty-two ; but more strictly cox&\&fei&&,*x&*&^. ^as».A
B
6 NEW YORK IN 1695.
strength, is only the part thereof within the fortifications, and so is
not in length or breadth above two furlongs, and in circumference
a mile. The form of it is triangular, having for the sides thereof
the west and north lines, and east and south for its arched basis.
The chief place of strength it boasts of is its fort, situated on the
south west angle, which is reasonably strong, and well provided
with ammunition, having in it about thirty-eight guns. Mounted
on the basis likewise, in convenient places, are three batteries of
great guns; one of fifteen called Whitehall Battery, one of five by
the Stadthouse, and the third of ten by the Burgher's Path. On the
north-east angle is a strong blockhouse and half moon, wherein are
six or seven guns : this part buts upon the river, and is all along
fortified with a sufficient bank of earth. On the north side are two
large stone points, and therein about eight guns, some mounted and
some unmounted. On the north-west angle is a blockhouse, and on
the west side two hornworks which are furnished with some guns,
six or seven in number : this side buts upon Hudson's River ; has
a bank in some places twenty fathoms high from the water, by
reason whereof, and a stockado strengthened with a bank of earth
on the inside, which last is also on the north side to the landward,
it is not easily assailable. As this city is the chief place of
strength belonging to this province for its defence against those
enemies who come by sea, so Albany is of principal consideration
against those who come by land, the French and Indians of Canada.
It is distant from New York 150 miles, and lies up Hudson's
River on the west side, on the descent of a hill from the west to
the eastward. It is in circumference about six furlongs, and hath
therein about 200 houses, a fourth part of what there is reckoned
to be in New York. The form of it is septangular, and the longest
line that which buts upon the river running from the north to the
south. On the west angle is the fort, quadrangular, strongly stock-
adoed and ditched round, having in it twenty-one pieces of ord-
nance mounted. On the north-west side are two blockhouses, a r
on the south-west as many : on the south-east angle stands
blockhouse ; in the middle of the line from thence northward
horned work, and on the north-east angle a mount. The wl
city is well stockadoed round, and in the several fortificati
named are about thirty guns. Dependent on this city, and al
NEW YORK IN 1695. 7
twenty miles distance to the northward from it, is the Fort of
Scanectade, quadrangular, with a treble stockado, a new block-
house at every angle, and in each blockhouse two great guns ; and
Nestigayuna, and the Half-moon ; places, formerly of some account,
but now deserted. On this city also depends the Fort at the Flats,
four miles from Albany, belonging to the River Indians, who are
about sixty families : it is stockadoed round, has a blockhouse and
a mount, but no great guns. There are in it five Indian wigwams,
and a house or two serving in case of necessity for the soldiers, in
number twenty-four, who are the guard there. Kingstone is the
chief town of Ulster County; lies on the west side of Hudson's
River, but two miles distant from it, from New York eighty-six,
and from Albany sixty-four miles: it is quadrangular, and stocka-
doed round, having small hornworks at convenient distances one
from the other, and in proper places. It is in circumference near
as big as Albany, but as to number of houses not above half so big :
on the south side is a particular part separated by a stockado from
the rest, and strengthened with a blockhouse and a hornwork
wherein are about six guns.
The number of the inhabitants in this province are about 3000
families, whereof almost one-half are naturally Dutch, a great part
English, and the rest French; which how they are seated, and
what number of families of each nations, what churches, meeting
houses, ministers or pretended ministers, there are in each county,
may be best discerned by the table here inserted. As to their
religion, they are very much divided; few of them intelligent and
sincere, but the most part ignorant and conceited, fickle and re-
gardless. As to their wealth and disposition thereto, the Dutch are
rich and sparing ; the English neither very rich, nor too great hus-
bands; the French are poor, and therefore forced to be penurious.
As to their way of trade and dealing, they are all generally cunning
and crafty, but many of them not so just to their words as they
should be.
The air of this province is very good, and much like that of the
best parts of France ; not very often foggy, nor yet cloudy or rainy
for any long time together, but generally very clear and thin : the
north-west winds frequently visit it, and chiefly in winter; nor does
there want in the summer the southern breezes, which <lai\^ ^\&s&\>
8 NEW YORK IN 1695.
rise about nine or ten in the morning, and continue till sunset. The
weather is, indeed, hotter in summer than one would well wish it,
and in winter colder than he can well endure it ; but both heat and
cold are in their seasons much abated by the wind last spoken of.
The coldest wind is generally reckoned to be the north-west, and
it is certainly very sharp and piercing, and causes most hard and
severe frosts ; but, in my judgment, the south-west exceeds it much,
but the best of it is that it does not blow very often there from
that quarter.
The air and winds being such as I have said, the country, con-
sequently, should be very healthful, and this is certainly so; and I
dare boldly affirm it to be, on that particular and most beneficial ac-
count, the best province his Majesty has in all America, and very
agreeable to the constitution of his subjects, so that a sober English-
man may go into it, live there, and come out of it again, without any
seasoning or other sickness caused merely by the country ; nay, it
is so far from causing, that, on the contrary, if a man be any thing
consumptive, and not too far gone, 'tis ten to one but it will cure
him ; and if inclined to rheums or colds, will in a great part, if not
wholly, free him from them.
If the air be good, the land is not bad, but, taking one place
with another, very tolerable, yea, commendable : there are, 'tis
true, many rocks and mountains, but, I believe, the goodness of
their inside as to metals and minerals will, when searched, make
amends for the barrenness of the outside : there are also many
woods and bogs, or rather swamps ; but few complain of them,
because they afford them mast for their hogs and food for their
breeding mares and cows, also, in the summer time, fur. Walnut,
cedar, oak of several kinds, and many other sorts of wood proper
for building of ships or houses, or necessary for fencing and fuel
turpentine for physical uses, and pitch and tar for the seaman':
service; many physical herbs, and much wild fowl, as swans
geese, ducks, turkies, a kind of pheasants and partridges, pi
geons, &c. and no less store of good venison, so that you ma
sometimes buy at your door a quarter for ninepence or a shilling
Hence also they have their furs, such as beaver, otter, fishe
martin, musk-rat, bear-skin, &c. Indeed, the countenance of thei
is not so beautiful as some of our English writers would make
I
NEW YORK IN 1695. 9
believe ; nor would I prefer, in that respect, the wild Indian country
before our English meadows and closes, much less our gardens
when in their most flourishing estate, notwithstanding that there
are here and there many herbs such and as good as those we
ve growing in our gardens to be found wild, as mint, sweet mar-
, &c; and, in their season, strawberries and walnuts, and
other sorts of fruits, in great abundance, especially grapes,
hich I am persuaded, if well improved, would yield great quan-
tities of strong and pleasant wine.
He that is not pleased with these advantages may, if he please
to take a little pains in clearing the ground by stubbing up the
trees and brushwood, have good arable land or pastures, that
shall, instead of woods and their wild produce, afford him good
corn and hay, and a reasonable number of fat cattle. Indeed, not all
alike, for the land toward the south is generally a sandy soil, and not
very fruitful, but rather something inclining to barrenness: the corn
that it produces is small, oftentimes spoiled by blasts and mil-
dews, or eaten (especially the white peas,) by the worms, but
then it produces very good Indian corn or maize ; pleasant fruits,
as apples, peaches, melons of several sorts; good roots, as parsneps,
turnips, carrots, and as good cabbages as need to be eaten : but to
the northward, and in the Indian country, the land is much better ;
the soil, black and rich, brings forth corn in abundance, and
that very firm, large, and good ; and, besides all those fruits afore-
mentioned (peaches excepted), cherries, pears, and currants.
Fish there is in great store, both in the sea and rivers; many of
them of the same kinds as we have in England, and many strange
and such as are not to be seen there; some even without name, ex-
cept such as was given them from the order they were taken in, as
first, second, third, &c. These are the produce of the country I
speak of, and there are yet more than these peculiarly proper for
the merchant, as train oil and whalebone, though in no very great
quantity ; and pipestaves, of which many thousands are yearly
transported, with several other things, which, with some of those
before-named, will admit of much improvement. The industry
that now is used is but little : the few inhabitants, having a large
country before them, care not for more than from hand to mouth,
and therefore they take but little pains, and yet that little pro •
10 ' NEW YORK IN 1695.
duces very good beer, bread, cider, wine of peaches, cloth stuff,
and beaver hats, a certain and sufficient sign how plentiful ai
beneficial a country it would be did but industrious art secoi *j
nature's bounty, and were but the inhabitants more in numbei
than at present they are.
Merchandizing in this country is a good employment, English
goods yielding in New York generally 100 per cent, advance
above the first cost, and some of them 200, 300, yea sometimes
400 : this makes so many in the city to follow it, that whosoever
looks on their shops would wonder, where there are so many to
sell, there should be any to buy.
This, joined to the healthfulness, pleasantness, and fruitfulness
thereof, are great encouragements to people rather to seek the
bettering of their fortunes here than elsewhere ; so that it may be
hoped that a little time will render the inhabitants more numerous
than at present they are. Do men expect profit in what they carry
with them to a foreign land ] — they need not fear it here, if their
goods but suit the country. Would they live in health] — no place
more likely to live so in, in this part of America. Would they
have plenty of necessaries for food and raiment 1 — New York, in
these, is not unkind ; but though a stepmother to those who come
from England, yet furnishes them as plentifully, if equally industri-
ous, as their natural country does those who stay behind. In short,
there is nothing wanting to make the inhabitants thereof happy
but some things which the country cannot help them in, nor yet is
guilty of the want thereof, to which either themselves do contri-
bute, or which their ill settlement, or worse government, has
introduced, and some things which the few years of their being a
province has not yet given any favourable opportunities for, nor
permitted to be settled among them ; which what they are I shall
next proceed to discover and speak of in the best method and order
that I can, and with as much brevity as the subject will conve-
niently admit of, after having first presented to the reader some
draughts or ground plots of the most remarkable places already
discoursed of, as you will perceive by considering these following
figures : —
i
v i
roe.
I
/,-<-
ft l!jij:,l,l
H jooJo'tisir
I-
=~^i? Hi 3
= ja ^ ifi.'rijijfiiii
% <«i SiJ i
ill!.,
fasts
4
%
rRj7£">
.1
I
'i-i
i I
1 3
i ■
i iii
» I * I f
j Jffff «?2
iiiiliii
1
«
I
NEW YORK IN 1695.
11
1 Counties.
Churches.
Ministers.
Families.
NEW YORK.
Chapel in the fort
Dutch Calvinists
Dutch Lutheran
French
Jews Synagogue
Haarlem
Dr. Selinus
Dr. Perot
Saul Brown
Dr. Selinus
90
450
SO
200
20
25
English 40, Dissent-
ers
RICHMOND.
A Meeting House
Dr. Bonrepos
English 40
Dutch 44
French 36
KING'S.
Flathush
Utretcht
Brookland
Dr. Varick, died Aug.
1694, and another
sent for May 27,
1695.
300 or 400, chiefly
Dutch.
QUEEN'S.
Jamaica 1 X r *•
.Newtown j
Mr. Philips \ without
Mr. Vesey Y any
Mr. Mot J orders.
300 or 400 English,
most Dissenters,and
some Dutch.
SUFFOLK.
Eight or nine Meeting
Houses; almostone
at every town.
Seven Ministers, Dis-
senters, Presbyte-
rian, or Independ-
ent One lately
gone to Scotland.
500 or 600 English,
and Dissenters for
the most part
WEST
CHESTER.
A Meeting House at
West Chester.
A young man coming
to settle there, with-
out orders.
200 or 300, English
and Dissenters; few
Dutch.
ORANGE.
20, English andDutcb.
DUTCHESS.
30,EnglishandDutcb.
ULSTER.
Dutch Calvin ist, at
Kingstone, for five
or six towns.
A Minister to co* ,
bis books brought;
but he missed his
passage.
300, Dutch mostly;
some English and
French.
ALBANY.
Dutch Calvinist
Dutch Lutheran
Scanecthade
Kinderhoeck.
Dr. Dellius.
A Dutch Minister
sent for.
400 or 500, Dutch, all
Calvinists, except
12 or 14 Lutherans.
12
CHAPTER II.
OF THE EVILS AND INCONVENIENCES IN NEW YORK.
Come we now to consider those things which I have said to be
either wanting or obstructive to the happiness of New York;
and here I shall not speak of every slight and trivial matter, but
only those of more considerable importance, which I count to be
six. 1st, The wickedness and irreligionof the inhabitants; 2d,
want of ministers ; 3d, difference of opinion in religion ; 4th, a
civil dissension; 5th, the heathenism of the Indians; and, 6th, the
neighbourhood of Canada : of every one of these I shall say some-
thing as shall be most material.
The first is the wickedness and irreligion of the inhabitants,
which abounds in all parts of the province, and appears in so many
shapes, constituting so many sorts of sin, that I can scarce teO
which to begin withal. But, as a great reason of and inlet to the
rest, I shall first mention the great negligence of divine things
that is generally found in most people, of what sect or party soever
they pretend to be : their eternal interests are their least concern,
and, as if salvation were not a matter of moment, when they have
opportunities of serving God they care not for making use thereof;
or, if they go to church, 'tis but too often out of curiosity, and to
find out faults in him that preacheth rather than to hear their own,
or, what is yet worse, to slight and deride where they should be
serious. If they have none of those opportunities, they are well
contented, and regard it little if there be any who seem oth^tfise
and discontented. Many of them, when they have them, make
appear by their actions 'twas but in show; for though at first they
will pretend to have a great regard for God's ordinances, and a
high esteem for the ministry, whether real or pretended, a little time
will plainly evidence that they were more pleased at the novelty
than truly affected with the benefit, when they slight that whick
they before seemingly so much admired, and speak evil of him who
before was the subject of their praise and commendation, and that
without any other reason than their own fickle temper and enviottf
humour. In a soil so rank as this, no marvel if the Evil One fin*
NEW YORK IN 1695. 13
a ready entertainment for the seed be is minded to cast in ; and
from a people so inconstant, and regardless of heaven and holy
things, no wonder if God withdraw his grace, and give them up a
prey to those temptations which they so industriously seek to em-
brace : hence is it, therefore, that their natural corruption without
check or hinderance is, by frequent acts, improved into habits most
evil in the practice, and difficult in the correction.
One of which, and the first I am minded to speak of, is drunken-
ness, which, though of itself a great sin, is yet aggravated in that it
is an occasion of many others. Tis in this country a common thing,
even for the meanest persons, so soon as the bounty of God has
furnished them with a plentiful crop, to turn what they can as
loon as may be into money, and that money into drink, at the same
time when their family at home have nothing but rags to protect
their bodies from the winter's cold ; nay if the fruits of their planta-
tions be such as are by their own immediate labour convertible into
liquor, such as cider, perry, &c, they have scarce the patience to
stay till it is fit for drinking, but, inviting their pot-companions,
they all of them, neglecting whatsoever work they are about, set to
it together, and give not over till they have drunk it off. And to
these sottish engagements they will make nothing to ride ten or
twenty miles, and at the conclusion of one debauch another gener-
ally is appointed, except their stock of liquor fail them. Nor are
the mean and country people only guilty of this vice, but they are
equalled, nay surpassed, by many in the city of New York, whose
daily practice is to frequent the taverns, and to carouse and game
their night employment. This course is the ruin and destruction
of many merchants, especially those of the younger sort, who,
carrying over with them a stock, whether as factors, or on their
own account, spend, even to prodigality, till they find them-
selves bankrupt ere they are aware.
In a town where this course of life is led by many, 'tis no
wonder if there be other vices in vogue, because they are the na-
tural product of it, such are cursing and swearing, to both of which
feople are here much accustomed ; some doing it in that frequent,
horrible, and dreadful manner as if they prided themselves both
as to the number and invention of them : this, joined with their pro-
C
14 NliW YORK IN 1695.
fane atheistical and scoffing method of discourse, makes their com-
pany extremely uneasy to sober and religious men, who some-
times, by reason of their affairs, cannot help being of their society,
and becoming ear-witnesses of their blasphemy and folly. 'Tis
strange that men should engage themselves so foolishly, and run
into the commission of so great a sin unto which they have no
sufficient, often not a pretended, provocation, and from which they
reap no advantage nor any real pleasure : and yet we see them
even delight in it, and no discourse is thought witty or eloquent
except larded with oaths and execrations. Howsoever difficult
these sins may be to be corrected in a large and populous king-
dom, I should scarce think them so in a province, where the total
number of inhabitants will scarce equal the 64,000th (64th) part of
those who are computed to be in London ; nay, am sure they might
be much hindered, were but the good laws made against them put
duly in execution.
Tis an ordinary thing with vices that one of them introduces
another, and is a reason of their easy and common success; and so
we see it here. That where men drink to so high a pitch, and pamper
their debauched palates with the rich and most nourishing viands
the country affords, 'tis certain the flesh must grow high and re-
bellious, so as imperiously to command where it ought to obey ; nay,
not to be contented without variety, whatsoever obstacle or impedi-
ment lies in the way. Reason, that should rule and direct to
better things, is so far debauched, that she pretends to defend the
contrary ; and by objecting the troubles and confinements of a
married state, and extolling the sweet and unconfined pleasures of
the wandering libertines, prevails with many not to think fornica-
tion, nay, not adultery, dangerous sins, but rather to be chosen than
lawful wedlock, the proper and really sufficient (though not to de-
bauched and pampered bodies) remedy for the hinderance of these "
evils. I say it is a proper and sufficient remedy if duly practised* ^
and according to law and reason, which in New York it is not; :
because,
1st. There are many couples live together without ever being-
married in any manner of way; many of whom, after they ha^
lived some years so, quarrel, and, thereupon separating, take unto-
NEW YORK IN 1695. 15
themselves, either in New York or some other province, new com-
panions ; but, grant they do not so, how can such expect that God
should bless them together while they live in open contempt of his
holy ordinance"!
2d. Those who in earnest do intend to be married together are
in so much haste, that, commonly, enjoyment precedes the marriage,
to which they seldom come till a great belly puts it so forward,
that they must either submit to that, or to shame and disgrace
which they avoid by marriage ; ante-nuptial fornication, where
that succeeds, being not looked upon as any scandal or sin at all.
3d. There is no sufficient provision for the marrying of people
in this province, the most that are married here being married by
justices of the peace, for which there neither is nor can be in New
York any law : on this account, many looking upon it as no mar-
riage at all, and being easily induced to think it so when they find
themselves pinched by the contract, think it no great matter to
divorce themselves, as they term it, and marry to others where
they can best, and according to their own liking. Whether this
manner of marrying by justices of the peace be a sufficient engage-
ment to the married couple to live together, is to me a matter not
disputable; and, in the meanwhile, the scandal and evil that flows
fiom hence is very great : and I myself know at this time a man
who fills the place and exercises the office of a minister and school-
master in the island of Barbadoes that was married to a woman of
New York by a justice of peace, and, after falling out with her,
betook himself to another woman, whom he got with child, and went
afterwards to Barbadoes, where, if he be not married to her, at
least he lives with her as though she were his wife ; the woman
the meantime continuing in New York, was soon after married to
another man.
4th. Supposing the way of marrying were lawful, yet many jus-
tices are so ignorant or mean-spirited, or both, that thereby it comes
i to pass they are often prevailed upon to marry a couple together
, that are either one or both of them engaged or married to other
persons : an eminent instance hereof I knew in New York. A
woman, dissolute in manners, not liking to live with her husband,
contracted herself to another person, and came with him to a justice
°f peace to be married. The justice, knowing the woman to be the
16 NEW YORK IN 1695
wife of another man, refused at first to marry them; but they, un-
derstanding he had offended in the like matter before, threatened
to acquaint the Governor therewith, if he would not marry them
also ; which, rather than hazard, he granted their request ; thus
offending the first time through ignorance, and the second through
fear. I came to know of it by this means : — the woman thus mar-
ried outliving her second husband, had inveigled the son of an
honest woman of Nassau Island to marry her, her first husband
yet living : his mother, looking upon such a match as his ruin,
sought all she could to hinder it, and, as her last refuge, came to
me, desiring me to do what I could that he might not have a license
out of the Secretary's office, which I obstructed by entering a ca-
veat, and so prevented it for that time ; and what is done in it since
I cannot tell : but this am sure of, that the too frequent practice of
this evil is such as loudly calls for redress and amendment
The great encouragement for gaining a livelihood that is given
to people in this province, where whosoever will take pains ma;
have land enough whereon to raise an estate for themselves and
heirs, and the mean accommodations or at least the no great riches,
of the first inhabitants, have been the reason that thieving and rob-
bing has been very little practised in this country. But now, of
late, since some people are become wealthy enough to purchase and
have by them what is worth the taking away, and that the out?
parts of the province (where the best land is) towards Canada an
so harassed by the French and their Indians, that men are fearful
to plant and dwell there, and that people are fallen into so great
debauchery and idleness, thieving is become more frequent; and
many considerable robberies have been committed in my time in
New York, to the great discouragement of industrious people, and
increase of vice and sin. There are many other wickednessei
which I might speak of as wanting redress, but there is no need of
enlarging on their account ; for, were these of greater note already
spoken of discouraged, the rest would of themselves fall to no:
thing.
17
CHAPTER III.
OF THE MINISTRY, AND DEFICIENCY THEREIN.
A SECOND and great inconveniency this province suffers under
is in relation to a ministry ; for it is most certain, that where there
are persons of some repute and authority living, who give good
example by their sober lives and conversations, and diligence in
their duty, sin is mightily discouraged, and religion and virtue gain
ground upon her daily, and increase and flourish ; and that, where
there are none such, vice has a free course, and religion continually
decays, and, what by the negligence of men, and the malice and
subtilty of the enemy of all, goodness runs to ruin. Now, in New
York, there are either
1, No ministers at all, that is, of the settled and established reli-
gion of the nation, and of such there is not, oftentimes, one in the
whole province; nor at any time, except the Chaplain to his
Majesty's forces in New York, that does discharge, or pretend to
discharge, the duty of a minister, and, he being but one, cannot do
it everywhere ; nay, but in very few places but New York itself;
and being necessitated sometimes to go to England, it happens that
both the garrison and city are without a minister a year toge-
ther. It happens, also, that he is often changed, which is not with-
out its inconveniences, but proves very prejudicial to religion in
many cases, as is easy to instance : besides, while he does his duty
among them, he shall experience their gratitude but very little,
and be sure to meet with a great many discouragements, except, in-
stead of reprehending and correcting, he will connive at and soothe
people in their sinful courses.
2, Or secondly, if there be any ministers, they are such as only
call themselves so, and are but pretended ministers; many of them
have no orders at all, but set up for themselves of their own head
and authority ; or, if they have orders, are Presbyterians, Indepen-
dents, &c. Now, all these have no other encouragement for the
pains they pretend to take than the voluntary contributions of the
people, or, at best, a salary by agreement and subscription, which
yet they shall not enjoy, except they take more care to please the
18 NEW YORK IN 1695.
humours and delight the fancies of their hearers, than to preach up
true religion and a christian life : hence it comes to pass that the
people live very loosely, and they themselves very poorly, at best,
if they are not forced for very necessity, and by the malice of some
of their hearers, to forsake their congregations. Besides being of
different persuasions, and striving to settle such sentiments as they
indulge themselves in in the hearts of those who are under their
ministry, they do more harm, in distracting and dividing the peo-
ple, than good in the amending their lives and conversations.
3, Or thirdly, if there be, or have been any ministers, and those
ministers of the Church of England, they have been here, and are in
other provinces, many of them, such as, being of a vicious life and
conversation, have played so many vile pranks, and shewn such an
ill light, as has been very prejudicial to religion in general, and the
Church of England in particular ; or else they have been such as,
though sober, yet have been very young, and so, instead of doing
good, have been easily drawn into the commission of evil, and be-
come as scandalous as those last mentioned. Now though, as to this
last charge, I must not be conceived to speak so much in relation to
New York as the other English plantations, because there has been
generally, from time to time, but one minister at a time as Chaplain
to their Majesties forces there, yet is not New York wholly un-
concerned herein, since, there having been several chaplains suc-
cessive to one another, some have not so carried themselves at
to be, and that deservedly, without blame : besides, three that I
know of have come by the by, whose either life or knowledge, <#.]
both, have not been commendable; and, as I am informed, their-
is one there now, and another going from Barbadoes, the former
not free from all exception, and the latter lying under very gieafrj
scandal.
CHAPTER IV.
OF DIFFERENCE IN RELIGION.
The province of New York being peopled by several nationi
there are manifold and different opinions of religion among them
as to which, though there are but very few of any sect who are eithi
NEW YORK IN 1695. 19
real or intelligent, yet several of the parti zans of each sort have every
one such a desire of being uppermost, and increasing the number of
their own party, that they not only thereby make themselves unhappy
by destroying true piety, and setting up instead thereof a fond heat
and blind zeal for they know not what, but also industriously obstruct
the settlement of the established religion of the nation, which only
can make them happy ; and have hitherto, either by their craft
and cunning, or their money, prospered in their designs ; and to
do thus they have but too much pretence, from the scandalous lives
of some ministers — the matter considered under the former head.
CHAPTER V.
OF THE CIVIL DIVISION.
I SHALL, in the fourth place, reckon as not a small un happiness
to the province of New York the division in the civil state hap-
pening on this occasion. When his present gracious Majesty came
into England to redeem us from Popery and arbitrary power, the
news of his success arriving in New England, put some people
there upon overturning the government, which they effected : how
just their reasons and proceedings were is not my business to inquire,
but this action of theirs put the inhabitants of New York upon the
Hke project Colonel Nicholson, the then Lieutenant Governor,
and the council, thought it best to attend orders what they should
do from England ; and in the meanwhile, the Colonel, to free
the people from all jealousies and fears, permitted daily a propor-
tionable part of the city train-bands to have the guard of the fort
with the King's soldiers. But Mr. Jacob Leysler, a man of small
'■ beginnings, but thence grown a merchant, and about this time
| decaying in his fortune, and others of his party, were no ways con-
\ tented with this moderate course proposed, but, pretending fears
; of being sold or given to the French, and terming all Papists, dfc
popishly affected, who did not favour his designs, seized upon the
: fart and government too, in the management of which he did many
g6od things ; and, if people say truth, was guilty of doing many
things that were irregular, and some very bad, as unlawfully im-
20 NEW YORK IN 1695.
prisoning the King's subjects, taking away their goods by force,
designings kill the natural English and all who joined with them,
man, woman, and child, &c; so that when Colonel Slaughter
came over in March 1691, he and one Mr. Milburn his son-in-
law, who had greatly counselled and assisted him in his designs,
were tried for their lives and condemned, and, what is more, hanged,
to the great sorrow and regret of their whole party, who have
vowed revenge, and, some say, want but an opportunity to effect
their purpose. I shall not pretend here to inquire into the real
intentions or actions of Leysler's party, or those who were against
them, neither into the truth of those things which the one party
allege against the other ; but only say, that, having considered
what I have seen done and heard said on the one side and on the
other, I do believe that there were some of either side who sought
in what they did their own advantage ; many who truly did intend
his Majesty's service ; and many who blindly followed the leading
men, neither considering what they did, nor whether they led them;
and that these injuries, done by either side to their opposites, have
made a most unhappy division and breach among them, which
will hardly of a long time admit of cure, except some very prudent
and moderate method be used for that purpose more than has
already been put in practice.
CHAPTER VI.
OF THE HEATHENISM OF THE INDIANS.
The next thing in this province blameable is the heathenism of
the natural Indians, who here, in the very heart of a Christian country, ,
practise their barbarous and devilish customs and modes of worship,
notwithstanding it is now sixty years and more since Christians
first inhabited this country, and thirty years since the English
were possessed thereof. Indeed, there is something to be said in
excuse hereof, that is, the unsettledness of the country for a long
time, the several changes of government it has undergone, aiA
the small number of the English at present ; and something to b®
objected, that is, that it would be first reasonable to settle religio* 1
NEW YORK IN 1695. 21
among those who are professed Christians before we pretend to
the conversion and settlement of the Indians. To which I answer,
that, as what is passed must be excused, since it can't be helped,
so, I see no reason in the objection, because a sufficient provision
may be made, that one thing may be done and the other not left
undone; especially when the Indians are so inclinable to receive
the Christian faith, as they have made appear they are, both by that
considerable number of the Mohawks whom Dr. Dellius has con-
verted, (though by a method not so exact and prevalent as might
be used,) and those Oneides converted to Popery by the Jesuit
Millet, much to the advantage of the French, who have debauched
so many of our Indians as they have made Christians, and obliged,
by so doing, some of our Mohawks so much, that one of them, as
I have heard, having run away from us to them, and, thereupon,
being upbraided with his infidelity in forsaking his old friends, in
his own defence made answer, that he had lived long among the
English, but they had never all that while had so much love for
him as to instruct him in the concerns of his soul, and shew him
the way to salvation, which the French had done upon their first
acquaintance with him; and, therefore, he was obliged to love
and be faithful to them, and engage as many of his nation as he
could to go along with him and to partake of the same knowledge
and instructions that were afforded and imparted to him, so that it
appears to be a work not only of great charity but of almost abso-
lute necessity to endeavour the conversion of the five nations and
other Indians, lest they be wholly debauched by the French, and
become, by God's just permission, for our neglect therein, of faith-
ful and true friends, as they have been hitherto, most dangerous
and cruel enemies.
D
22
CHAPTER VII.
OF CANADA.
Canada, although not in this province, but far distant from it, is
yet a great enemy to the peace and happiness of it. First, as it is the
reason why the most fruitful part thereof lies at present waste, for-
saken by its former inhabitants, and hindered as to its future im-
provements. Second, as it is the reason why His Majesty and the
remainder of this province are at great charges in maintaining
Albany and the frontiers against the insults of the French and their
Indians. Third, as they debauch our Indians from their fidelity,
and instruct them in popery, both which at present are, and here-
after will be, much to the damage of this province : add hereunto
that, by the damage they do to the other provinces [of] New Eng-
land, and are at all times ready to do, they put the king of England
and his subjects to a great deal more charge to defend themselves
than the king of France, or the Jesuits (if it be their country, as
some say it is) are at to defend Canada against us, though we are
in all more than twenty times their number ; besides, the governors
of New York that have been from time to time have so often pro-
mised our Indians, to encourage them to continue the war, that they
would send for ships from England to come and wholly subdue and
conquer Canada, that they, seeing they do not come, and that Sir
Francis Wheeler, when at Boston, attempted nothing, begin to be
discontented, and to charge the governor with breach of promise, and
are very wavering in their fidelity and friendship towards the
English ; so that it appears a matter highly requisite to be endea-
voured to conquer and subdue Canada, and that before it grow
stronger in fortifications than at present it is; and, indeed, it is a
shame it should not be effected, when we so much exceed them in
strength in those parts, and when, if it please God to prosper us
therein, we shall not only be freed from the charges which at pre-
sent every province is at, more or less, but Canada may be so
settled that it may be a great addition of strength and wealth to
the English in America, without being, in a little time, any charge
but rather a benefit to the crown, as by a method to be laid doW^
NEW YORK IN 1695. 23
for the subduing and re-settlement of it, shall, as I trust, in due time
and place appear. And now I have finished the consideration of
the province of New York, and of those things therein or relating
thereto which, being of greater moment or consequence, are worthy
of blame and correction ; and shall now lay down the means and
method which I conceive proper for the remedying thereof, and
thereby of advantaging and improving the country, which I shall
do in three chapters : the first treating of the more general means ;
the second containing a particular method for the conversion of
the Indians ; and the third proposing a way for the subduing and
resettlement of Canada.
CHAPTER VIII.
OF THE MORE GENERAL MEANS FOR CORRECTING THE EVILS
IN NEW YORK.
The great, most proper, and as I conceive effectual, means to
remedy and prevent all the disorders I have already mentioned,
and promote the settlement and improvement of religion and unity,
both among the English subjects that are already Christians and
the Indians supposed to be made so, is, that his Majesty will gra-
ciously please to send over a bishop to the province of New York,
who, if duly qualified, impowered, and settled, may, with the as-
sistance of a small force for the subduing of Canada, by God's
grace and blessing be author of great happiness, not only to New
York in particular, but to all the English plantations on that part
of the continent of America in general. I doubt not but this pro-
posal may, at first sight, seem very strange and unlikely to be ef-
fected; but if what follows be duly weighed and considered, I
believe it will not appear wholly unreasonable.
It has heretofore been usual in England, when and where the
dioceses have been so large that the bishop alone could not suffice
far the government thereof, to adjoin to him one or more suffragan
bishops, each of which were wont to execute such power, jurisdic-
tion, and authority, and receive such profits as were limited in their
commission by the bishop or disocesan whose suffragans they were.
24 NEW YORK IN 1695.
Such an one, 1 humbly conceive, might be very well sent over to the
north-east part of America, to be there and act as suffragan to my Lord
of London. To do this, as I doubt not his Majesty's power, so I
cannot think my Lord of London will be unwilling; and I am sure
the great distance of the country, being 3000 miles from England,
the largeness of the provinces considered altogether, and number
of the people, with the other particulars already mentioned, do suf-
ficiently require it. In hopes, therefore, that such a proposal as
this will meet with good entertainment, or with a charitable and
candid construction, at the least, among those who can best pro-
mote it, I shall proceed to mention some things which will much
conduce to the bishop's better entertainment and success.
And, first, I shall speak of his personal qualifications; second, of
the place of his residence; third, of the powers to be committed to
him; and, fourth, of the provision to be made for his maintenance.
1. — Among his personal qualifications I must, in the first place,
reckon his age, his learning, and his piety, which, being par-
ticulars not fit for me to speak of, I shall pass them by, and leave
them to the prudent judgment and determination of that pious
prelate whose suffragan he is to be. But because I am something
acquainted with the humours and inclinations of the inhabitants of
that country, I shall make bold to add, that it is requisite he be
a person of an obliging temper and conversation, who, having
power to compel, will rather persuade and win to obedience by
kind acts and generous usage ; one whose deportment must vindi-
cate his person and place from contempt, and yet must be, when
occasions require, so meek, complaisant, and free, that even the
meanest may not have reason to count him proud. One whose
generous soul must always aim at good and laudable actions, and
whose humility and love to virtue must be so great and real as
that he will not think much to submit to low condescensions,
inferior means, and continual pains to bring a pious and possible
design to perfection : one that can so justly esteem of riches as to
think it a necessary care to manage his income well, that he may
have wherewithal to forward and encourage a good work, and yet
so little affect and love them, as freely to part with them to pious
and charitable uses; and, lastly, one that will both constantly
practise those eminent notes of true Christianity, love and charity*
NEW YORK IN 1695. 25
himself, and promote them among all those who call themselves
disciples of the crucified Jesus.
2. — The place of his residence, as I have already intimated, will
most properly be in the province and city of New York, for which
there are several reasons : — first, the healthfulness of the couutry,
the air being clear and pure, and the climate most agreeable to an
English constitution, so that few or none contract diseases on that
account, but many are freed from them ; second, because a main-
tenance will be more easily settled for him in this province than in
any other, after the manner I shall presently set down; third, because
this is the most proper place to begin a reformation of disorders
in, which are here greater than any where else, and yet will be
more easily regulated ; and to settle the government of the church
of England, a matter whose foundation being already laid, though
at present hindered, will yet, with a little pains, be put into a good
forwardness ; fourth, for the site of it, this country is as much as
may be in the midst of all the other English plantations, so that a
bishop being placed therein, his good influences and care will be
readily dispensed for the benefit of every part ; fifth, because there
are already such forces in this province, that is, 300 soldiers in his
Majesty's pay, as will be sufficient to awe troublesome and prag-
matical spirits, if there be any so bold as to endeavour to make
any disturbance upon his going over.
3. — The power and authority requisite for him are these follow-
ing : — first, that he be consecrated bishop by the archbishop, and
duly impowered by my Lord of London, so that he may act as
suffragan bishop to him, not only in New York, but also in all
the English provinces in tliat part of America ; second, that his
Majesty, uniting the provinces of New York, Connecticut, New
Jersey, and Rhode Island into one government, will please to send
him over governor thereof, allowing him all the powers and pri-
vileges granted usually to the governors of New York, with power
•ho to go out of his province so often as he shall think good to
mt the other provinces as bishop only, and to constitute, not only
fcr the time of his absence but if he see necessary at all other
tales, a lieutenant governor under him.
Note, that this union of the four governments proposed is not of
•bttlute necessity, only of great convenience, so that it may be
26 NEW YOKK IN 1695.
omitted (especially if Canada be subdued), and the bishop be
made governor of New York only, with the powers and privileges
before mentioned.
4. — That a maintenance may not be wanting suitable to his
place and the great ends he is to promote, neither for the present
nor future, it is requisite,
First, That if his Majesty is pleased to unite the four govern-
ments into one, that then he will please also to allow the bishop, as
governor thereof, £1500 per annum, out of which a reasonable part
or portion shall be paid to the lieutenant governor ; or if New
York be continued as it is at present, and he sent over as governor
thereof only, that then his Majesty will please to allow him <£1000
per ann. salary (out of which the lieutenant governor to have a
reasonable part), and all the other profits, benefits, and privileges
which the present governor of New York enjoys; and also leave
and power to search for (if he please) and open royal mines, as of
silver, etc., if he can find any such, either in Connecticut, Rhode
Island, New York, or New Jersey, on condition that in so doing
he make use of the service of negroes only, and to pay to hut
Majesty such a proportion of the metal as, the charges and good-
ness of the ore considered, shall seem reasonable.
Second, That, to make up the abatement of his salary by that
part allowed the lieutenant governor, his Majesty will please, so
soon as opportunity presents, to give him some considerable pre-
ferment in England that does not require his personal residence.
Third, That his Majesty will please to allow him all licenses of
marriage and probates of wills, and other things usually belonging
to the bishops of England, and at present withheld from my lord
of London, and these to be given to himself as bishop, and those
who shall be sent after him to serve in that station, now only ia
the province of New York and its dependencies, but hereafter in
the other provinces also, so soon as religion shall come to be fully-,
established therein : these particulars, if granted, will well suflk*
for a present maintenance; but then we must not neglect to pro-
pose a method of providing and settling a future maintenance thafc-
may be peculiar to himself as bishop, when he is so only, not cofr*
stituted governor, as at present he is supposed to be, but when* .
some other gentleman is sent over in that station, that he m»JT
NKW YORK IN 1695. 27
then have wherewithal to maintain his family and keep up hospi-
tality. Besides what [is] already considered, that will then remain to
him, these further particulars are necessary to be put in practice : —
1. That his Majesty will please to give him the farm in New
York, commonly called the king's farm, for a seat for himself and
successors, which, though at present a very ordinary thing, yet will
it admit of considerable improvement; and since this farm, renting
at present for sixty bushels of wheat per annum, in the whole at
bur shillings per bushel, amounting to £12 New York money, is
at present an advantage to the governor, that I may not seem not
to care how much I impoverish the governor so I enrich the bishop,
['farther propose that the bishop be obliged, when himself is not
governor, to render an equivalent to the present rent, either by
giving yearly so many loads of hay, or by settling so much land
where he please, within two miles of New York, as shall be suffi-
cient for that purpose, or to pay the sum of money itself, which
ahall be best approved of.
2. That his Majesty will please, by letters patent, to grant him
the propriety of the Mohawks land, that is, so much thereof as is
now unpurchased of the Indians, on condition that the first improve-
ment he makes thereof shall be to settle in one or two towns, as
shall seem best, 100 English families, on 5000 or 6000 acres of
good land, the whole to be settled on himself as bishop, and his
successors; and, for his encouragement, so to do with all the other
land to be improved by him afterwards, as shall be best for the par-
ticular' benefit and advantage of himself and heirs.
And that the Bishop may be the better furnished for some par-
ticular works of charity, such as converting the Indians, building
churches, settling houses and a maintenance for ministers, etc., it is
iuriher humbly proposed —
* 1. That his Majesty, the Bishops, and other charitably dis-
pwed gentlemen, will please to make some contributions towards
holding a church in New York.
2b That his Majesty, and my Lord of London, will please to
j|ta him the best authority and directions that may be for the ob-
[taung a part of the revenue settled in New England for convert-
ing the Indians, such as shall be thought convenient.
['- 8. That his Majesty will please to allow a chaplain to the sol-
28 NEW YORK IN 1695.
diers at Albany in particular (to be paid out of the advance of
pay) who are lately gone over, and to be sometimes changed
him at New York.
4. Lastly, it is necessary that the Bishop carry over with
five or six sober young ministers, with bibles and prayer books,
other things convenient for churches, as shall be thought best
Whosoever goes over with these powers, qualifications, and
plies, shall in a short time (through God's assistance) be able
make a great progress in the settlement of religion, and the co
tion of vice and debauchery in those countries ; and, to be a
more particular, —
1. To those several vices of irreligion, drunkenness, cursing
swearing, fornication and adultery, thieving, and other evils
panying them — he may put a stop by causing the good laws of
land already made to be put in execution, and by providing o
where those seem or are deficient; and also,
2. Which will remedy likewise the second head of inconverfl
ences, want of a ministry, by settling ministers in those towM
already provided for by Act of Assembly in some measure, and, M|
he best can, by supplying them with what is wanting, both for UmI|
private necessities and for the public exercise of religion, as allotting
to them or purchasing for them glebe lands, promoting the buildifljg
of churches, ministers' houses, settling schools with salaries, &c. bf
endeavouring, so soon as may be, to provide for other places which
are not provided for by that act, by exhorting, and, where good ad*
vice and persuasions will not prevail, by compelling, ministers t0
live piously and soberly, and give a good example to their flocks.
3. By not suffering any justice of peace to marry in the pro
within ten miles of the place where any minister dwells, and
deavouring to promote the establishment of the like law in o
provinces where it may conveniently be done, by causing
ministers and churchwardens to keep registers of all christeni
buryings, and marriages, according as in England is by law
pointed, and always to take great care to prevent the marrying
any persons who are either one or both of them already en
or married to others.
4. And where this is duly taken care of, another inconvenient
will be well provided for. Men, although at present of many anA
NEW YORK IN 1695.
29
different opinions! yet may be reconciled, in a great measure, by a
pious and prudent ministry, who will seek to reduce them by good
exhortations, to oblige them by neighbourly and charitable kind-
nesses, to encourage them by their own practice to live in the
fear of God, and in brotherly love and unity one with another.
5. And though this method will greatly help towards the removal
of the fourth inconveniency, yet it will not be completed without
the assistance of his civil authority ; that is, by causing a proclama-
tion, or, if it seem necessary, an Act of Assembly, to be made,
prohibiting all people to reproach any person for having been of
Leysler's or the contrary party ; to vex or sue one another in law
for any evils suffered in those times, or since; or to do any thing
that may tend to the widening the breach or continuing the re-
membrance thereof, commanding them to forget things past, and
to forgive one another ; to live in peace, and to associate together
as they did before that division, and as if such a thing had never
happened : and by shewing himself indifferent to both parties, en-
couraging equally those of them who shew themselves honest and
virtuous, and truly well affected to his Majesty's interest. Thus
may these several inconveniencies already mentioned be well re-
dressed ; but as for the conversion of the Indians, and the conquest
of Canada, they will require, each of them, a particular chapter.
CHAPTER IX.
OF CONVERTING THE INDIANS.
WflEN I speak of converting the Indians, by Indians I mean,
principally, those five nations which lie between Albany and Ca-
nada, and are called, — 1, Mohawks or Maquaes ; 2, Oneides ; 3,
Chiugas ; 4, Onundages ; and 5, Penecas : of whom tho' most of
the Mohawks are converted to Christianity by Dr. Dellius, and
some of the Oneides by the Jesuit Millet ; yet the first not being yet
established in any good order at all, and the last being converted to
popery, I look upon the work as yet wholly to be done ; and if
what has been already done is not a disadvantage to it, yet that
E
30 NEW YORK IN 1695.
little advantage is gained thereby, except a demonstration of th<
inclination of the Indians to embrace the Christian religion. Am
though I mention only the five nations, yet do I not speak of then
so as excluding all other septs and nations of them ; no — for I hope
this, once performed and brought to a good pass, may be as a ground-
work to the conversion of all the rest, as opportunity shall present;
yea, possibly may be improved so far as to render this part of the
continent truly civilized, speaking the English language, and sub-
mitting to his Majesty's government. And to begin, —
First. — That the person who undertakes this work should be a
person of great authority, ability, and power, that he may the
better persuade with them, and be the more respected, and abler
to go through with such a matter, are things of so great advantage,
that if they were not things already provided for, do deserve cer-
tainly to be put in the first place; but it being proposed that the
bishop himself who shall be sent over be the main-spring and
mover in this work, I therefore, without saying more thereof, add,
Second. — That when he goes out of England he carry over with
him one Dutch and English dictionary, interleaved with white
paper; paper of several sorts and in considerable quantity, foi
writing and printing books thereon ; nails, iron, glass, and lead,
for the churches and ministers' houses; tools for joiners, carpenters,
masons, and glaziers, in such quantities as shall be thought conve-
nient, or at least as the monies given for that purpose will allow.
Third. — That after his arrival there, he, with two other minis-
ters whom he shall best approve of to be his assistants, set tc
learning that Indian language which is best understood by all the
five nations; and for that purpose send for, and entertain in some
employment about him, Mr. Arnhout, of Albany, the chief inter
preter between the English and the Indians, who will be & greal
help to him in composing a dictionary, and learning the language;
and get an Indian Bible and grammar from Boston, which will h
likewise of some advantage to him.
Fourth. — That after he can speak Indian well, and translate
elegantly, he then, as opportunity shall best present, call all (h
nve nations together, and endeavour, in a discourse composed fa
that purpose, to instruct them, and, by the best arguments he can
to persuade them to embrace the Christian faith and be baptized
NEW YORK IN 1695. 31
in which if it please God he succeeds, as there is great hopes he
may, then —
1st — To desire of the five nations so many sober young men
of each nation as he shall think convenient to live with him some
time, and learn to read and write in their own language, and also
to speak the English tongue, and read and write in the same ; and
some others, in number about twelve, to learn the trades of joinery,
carpentry, masonry, and glazing ; and, in the meantime, while they
are learning these things, one of the two ministers shall be ap-
pointed to instruct the Indians in Christianity, as may best be
done, and to bring over those who do not consent upon the first
proposal.
2d. — While the other minister is learning the young Indians
to read, etc. himself, with his assistance, may translate, as of the
greatest use and necessity, the Common Prayer Book, the thirty-nine
Articles, the Whole Duty of Man, and Patrick's Psalms; and then
afterwards, as they best may, ( ) Short explanation of the
Church Catechism, Dr. Hammond's Catechism, some short pre-
paratory form for receiving the holy communion, a morning and
evening Prayer for private persons, and a Primer for children, with
a short morning and evening Prayer, and Graces before and after
meat ; so many copies of each to be printed as shall be thought
convenient, and no other book besides them to be translated or
printed in the Indian language, especially not the Bible, that the
Indians, through a desire to read them, may be stirred up to learn
the English language, and so at length may be induced to exchange
that for their own; for otherwise, the Indian nations being so many,
it will be almost an impossible work to convert them and provide
for their civilizing and instruction.
3d. — After the young men can read and write well, and are
acquainted with our language, customs, and religious service, the
manner and way thereof (in which they, as also those put to trades,
are to be inured as much as may be), and admitted to holy orders,
then to dispose of them, settling one in every castle, except where
two small castles are near to one another, for both which one may
well suffice ; and, for their better settlement, to cause to be built a
church, a minister's house, and large room adjoining to it for a
32 NEW YORK liN 1695
school, of wood or stone, as shall seem best and cheapest, (in which
work the labour of those who learn trades will be very helpful);
and after those things are perfected, gathering all the heads of the
five nations together, to cause a maintenance by land to be settled
for their ministry, that is, the tenth part of their profit or income
by hunting, fishing, fowling, etc., and of their corn and other
fruits of the earth, with some peculiar advantages upon the account
of their being schoolmasters, as it is intended they shall be.
Those who are instructed in trades are to live among their country-
men, to teach them their arts; and that they may find employ-
ment, they are to be put upon building houses after the English
manner, keeping cattle and fowls, ploughing the ground, and
imitating the English in their other trades, ways of living, and
customs, and one thing after another, that so, by degrees they may
leave off their savage ways and become civilized, which, except it
can be effected, it will signify but little to plant religion among them;
therefore, so many other young sober Indians as shall be thought
convenient may be taken in the places of those who are settled as
ministers, and taught and instructed after the same manner they
were, and put in their places too so soon as fit for it, either when
any of them prove debauched, or improve not in knowledge,
or neglect their duty (who in that case shall again be under
instruction for their amendment or better information), or where
any of them prove of eminent parts above the rest, and more sober
and religious, who shall then be encouraged and allowed fit helps
and instructions for the promoting the conversion of their neigh-
bouring nations, which they may well do with the assistance of an
English minister or two and the countenance of the bishop ; and so
in a few years, if this method be duly prosecuted, all the Indians
on this part of the continent may, as 'tis to be hoped, be converted
to Christianity ; and, when they are civilized, may easily be in-
duced to submit to the English government by the bishop, whom
they must needs look upon, respect, and obey as their spiritual
father, and one who will, to be sure, advise them as shall be most
for their real benefit and welfare. And when they come to such a
pass as that way can be made and means settled for arts and
sciences to flourish among them, there is no doubt but many of
NEW YORK IN 1695. 33
them will become men of sufficient learning so that they may be
instructed in the way of preaching, and have the full government
and service of the Church of England settled among them, or ac-
quainted with our laws, so as to be made magistrates, and govern
the people by our statutes instead of their own rude and barbarous
customs. The first of which when perfected, as it will be a great
credit to the Church of England, so will the other be of great ad-
vantage to the civil state thereof; and both, I hope, tend to the
glory of God and the eternal felicity of immortal souls.
But, till these designs can be fully accomplished, we must be
contented to insist upon a method of religion that, though not com-
plete as it should be, is yet such as the beginnings of Christianity
among them will bear, and as is proper for weak teachers and
ignorant hearers, and that to be this that follows : —
The ministers' duty in general among them is to be this: to pray
for them, to read and administer the sacraments to them, to teach
their children to read and to write, and speak English and their
catechism, and to be thus ordered :
1st. He is to read Common Prayer among them (the lessons out
of the Bible excepted) every Sunday and holyday, both morning
and evening.
2d. On Easter Sunday, Whitsunday, the third Sunday in
September, and on Christmas-day, after Common Prayer read in
the morning and a psalm sung, he shall read to the people the
thirty-nine articles of religion, and every other Sunday one por-
tion of " The Whole Duty of Man," as they shall fall in order, and,
when the whole is read out, shall begin again.
3d. Every first Sunday of the month, and on Good Friday,
Easter-day, Whitsunday, and Christmas-day, he shall administer
(he holy sacrament; and then the Sunday preceding such ad-
[ ministration, upon notice thereof given, shall be read the exhorta-
. tion in the Common Prayer-book appointed for that purpose.
4th. Every Sunday in the afternoon, at evening prayer, when
: the first and second lessons should be read in place thereof, after a
• psalm set he shall publicly catechise the children; those that are able
;' toread, unto eight years of age, in the Church Catechism, from eight
to twelve years of age in ( ) Short explanation thereof,
and those from twelve to sixteen years of age in Dr. Hammond's
34 NEW YORK IN 1695.
Catechism, after which they may be admitted to the sacrament.
The several catechisms shall be learned by heart by the children
at home and at school.
5th. On the working days he shall teach the children to write, and
to read, and to speak English; for their reading using a Horn-book,-
The Primer, the Church Catechism, etc.; for teaching English,
to use those and the English translations of them together with the
other books, and also a grammar, with familiar dialogues to be
composed for that purpose, and the Dictionary.
And by the just and constant observance of this method, there
is no doubt but, through God's grace, they may be brought to ■
and continued in a reasonable knowledge and practice of the i
Christian religion, till such time as, being thoroughly civilized, the
whole discipline and government of the Church of England may
be settled among them, and also duly practised and observed by
them.
CHAPTER X.
OF THE METHOD HOW TO SUBDUE AND RESETTLE CANADA.
I AM now in the last place to speak of the conquest of Canada,
that is, how it may be effected — a business in which, though the
Bishop is not so much concerned as in the former, especially as
to the warlike part, yet may he be more than a cipher, yea, of
particular consideration in the settlement of it, if it please God to
permit it to be subdued, as in the sequel will appear.
What the strength and condition of Canada is at present is
pretty well made evident by the account thereof which I sent over
about ten or twelve months ago to the Right Reverend Bishop of
London, a copy whereof I also had, which I lost (when I was taken
prisoner) with my other papers, and in respect to that it is that
this present method is laid down ; and though it may be supposed,
since that time, to be made rather stronger than become weaker,
yet will it not, I think, be able to resist, if courageously invaded
and prudently assaulted with the forces, and in the manner here-
after mentioned: —
NEW YORK IN 1695. 35
1st. The first thing then to be done, in order to the conquest of
Canada, is to pitch upon a general for the conducting and carry-
ing it on ; the general, then, is to be but one to command all forces,
both by sea and land, that are sent or appointed for this purpose :
for long experience has taught us, that equal and divided com-
mands have ruined many noble undertakings and great armies.
The wise and warlike Romans found this true, and, therefore, in
their wars of greatest moment and danger, they generally had re-
course to a dictator ; and the success in the late invasion of Mar-
tinico has taught us the truth of it, wherein, as I have been
credibly informed by impartial and eye-witnesses, the difference
between the land and sea generals was the main, if not only, occa-
sion of the miscarriage. As to his prudence, fidelity, experience,
conduct, and courage, all great virtues and necessary in a com-
mander, I have no need to speak thereof; his sacred Majesty, who
is to pitch upon and commissionate him, being a most excellent and
incomparable judge in those matters.
2d. The second thing to be provided for is forts, and warlike
provisions sufficient for such a design, and these to be either sent for
[from] England or prepared in America. The forces to be sent from
England are proposed to be three ships of war of from forty to
sixty guns, well rigged and manned according to their rates, fur-
nished with all warlike provisions necessary for sea-service and
maintenance of the men ; as to which there may be six months
provision of beer and water, and of beef, pork, oatmeal, peas, and
bread, etc., for twelve months, canvass for 4000 or 5000 hammocks,
or rather so many hammocks ready made for the forces that are to
be raised in America ; and, for the land service, 500 soldiers, well
armed and accoutred, young, stout, well exercised, and, so far as
may be, unmarried ; twenty pieces of ordnance proper for batter-
ing of walls, with spunges, ladles, worms, powder, and bullets,
etc., and two or three mortar pieces with granado shells, bombs,
carcasses, spades, mattocks, and also powder and ball for the forces
to be raised in America, that nothing may be wanting, though the
enterprise prove much more difficult than is expected, it being
much better to bring back ammunition than to fail in a design for
want of it : however, as to the quantities and kinds thereof, I
submit to better judgments, and shall only say that it will be a
36 NEW YORK IN 1696.
commendable care to see that the officers, both by sea and land,
be such as are truly faithful and loyal to his Majesty. These
ships, with all the particulars aforesaid, are to be ready to set sail
by the middle, or, at farthest, by the latter end of February next
The forces to be prepared in America, are to be these and in
this proportion following : — New England 2000 men, Connecticut
700, Rhode Island and Martins-vineyard 200, New York 300,
New Jersey 300, Pensylvania 300, Maryland 400, Virginia
1000, and Carolina 300, amounting in all to the number of 5500,
each man to have in readiness so much powder and ball as shall be
judged requisite; and, if it be thought expedient, twenty carriages
also may be made in New York for the twenty guns, to be sent over
according to measures and directions to be sent likewise for that
purpose.
The manner of ordering these forces and materials to be pre-
pared shall be laid down under the next head, which is concern-
ing the secrecy and privacy wherewith these affairs are to be carried
on, which ought to be so great that the enemies may not get any
foreknowledge of it ; for, next to strengthening ourselves, nothing
is more necessary than to endeavour to surprise our enemy, which
is done, first, by rendering him secure ; second, by coming upon
him unawares ; and, third, by drawing away what strength or pro-
vision he already hath, as far as may be, from the place or places
against which our designs are chiefly laid, which I conceive may
be done by ordering affairs in this manner following : —
1st. To prevent all knowledge, or even suspicion, of what is
intended by the provisions made at home and sent over, the ships
may be pretended as convoys to the Must fleet, and to the Virginia
fleet ; and as to the stores put aboard them, it must be done as pri-
vately as may be, though, of itself, it be a thing that will not be
much suspected, because it has been usual to send over stores to
the American plantations, neither will the soldiers be much taken
notice of, they being but 500 ; besides, they may be put on board
at Plymouth suddenly, and under pretence of better manning the
ships ; or, if there goes a squadron of men of war to guard the fleet
out of the Channel, it may be pretended that it is to inure them to
the sea service; and then they may be disposed of to several other
ships, as if they were to come back again therewith after having
NEW YORK IN 1695. 37
seen the fleet out of danger ; and at sea they may be put aboard
the ships in which they are to go to New York : in short, many
ways may be thought of for the concealing the intention of so
small a preparation, and that particularly pitched upon which
will seem most likely and proper for the time. But, then, besides
the orders given to the captains of the ships publicly, and for that
: purpose, they must likewise have other sealed orders given them
very privately, with command not to break them open till a certain
tune to be appointed, that is, when they come to separate from the
feet, or when the fleet itself comes to separate, or, if they chance
to be separated by foul weather, then to break open those orders
wherein it shall be appointed them what port to go to, that is, New
York ; what commander to obey, that is the same who is made
general of the land forces; how long to stay, that is, either till the
design is effected, or till the coming out of some fleet according as
die governor of the province where they are shall judge best for
kis Majesty's service ; or if there be a great necessity and the ships
proper, they maybe sent out to cruise for privateers, or they may be
otdered to visit Newfoundland by the way. One thing seems here
proper to be mentioned, that is, that when these orders are opened,
and the soldiers come to have some knowledge where they are going,
their pay may be paid them till such time as they came aboard, and
farther advantages promised them for their encouragement
It will not be amiss, if two French ministers, that are in orders
of the Church of England, be sent over with these ships, for, if it
please God the design prosper, there will be occasion for them.
2. For the more private carrying on of the design as to the forces
prepared in the West Indies, it is convenient not to let it be so much
as known to any person there (except that his Majesty shall please
to communicate it to any of the governors) what is the true cause of
iaising the forces ordered to be raised, and that may be done thus :
It is now, while I am writing this, certain, that the French have a
design upon the merchants trading on the coast of Guinea, and those
fading into the West Indies. In order to the carrying on of the first,
they are fitting out at St- Maloes four privateers, of from forty to
fifty guns, and Monsieur de Gatine, commissary there, sent for one
fl^hm Piles, and Henry Pinson his mate, both taken on board
t snail Gnineaman, and having good knowledge of the coast and
38 NEW YORK IN 1695.
trade, and present condition of affairs there, to examine them con-
cerning the same. And in order to the carrying on of the last,
the English prisoners that came about four days ago, that is,
October the 6th, last past, from Nants, do assure us, that the
French are there fitting out seventeen privateers of from twenty-
five and thirty to forty guns, whereof twelve are already rigged
and fitted, to be manned in part with English, Scotch, and Irish,
and to be sent to the West Indies, to interrupt and spoil our trade,
and make prize of our merchantmen there. Hereupon occasion
may be very well taken, and letters ordered to be written and sent
with duplicates thereof by ships in December next ensuing, or the
beginning of January, to every one of his Majesty's governors,
and also to those of the proprietors, wherein to be signified to each
of them, that there is certain intelligence from France of their fitting
out divers ships of war, twenty or more, and that they are intended
against our plantations in America. That, therefore, it is his Ma-
jesty's strict charge and command, that every one of them cause to
be armed, in their several provinces, such a number of their choicest
men as shall, by one, two, or three hundred, exceed the number
before set down, and to meet at their chief port town by the 1st of
April, and there to see that they be well armed, and every man
provided with a proportion of powder and ball, to be appointed
and to exercise them daily till further order ; and, in the meantime,
to see that whatsoever of his Majesty's ships are in their several
ports, be cleaned and fitted for sea, so as to be ready to sail with
the first order ; and also to fit and prepare a sufficient number of
good ships and sloops, and provisions of bread, beef, beer, pork,
and peas, etc. for six months, in case there be occasion to transport
the soldiers from their province to any other where it shall appear
the enemy does chiefly intend his invasion, of which warning may
be promised them by an express so soon as there shall be certain
notice thereof.
And over and above this, orders may be sent to the Gover-
nor of New York, in particular, to make the twenty carriages
as before ; and to cause to attend at New York, from the 1st of
April till further order, Robert Sanders of Albany, and five
others that can give the latest and truest account of the present
state and condition of Canada, without letting them know what
NEW YORK IN 1695. 39
they are caused to wait for, but only, in general, that it is for his
Majesty's service ; and that they shall be paid for the loss of their
time, or else they may be kept under arms as men of special ser-
vice and courage, which shall seem best to him, for concealing the
true reason of their attendance. As for the carriages, he may pre-
tend for the making thereof, that he has notice of so many guns of
such a sort or bigness coming over, and order to have carriages for
them in as much readiness as mav be: that so soon as he has them
they may be presently fitted for use, and planted where he shall
think most convenient.
There may likewise with these, other orders be sent him, not to
be broken open till the 1st of April, wherein it may be signified
unto him that his Majesty, looking upon the French preparations
as intended against New York, would send some ships of war over
to his assistance, but that he immediately endeavour to stop any
intelligence thereof from going to Canada. That he also send the seve-
ral orders therein inclosed to the governors of the several provinces,
to cause them forthwith to send away the exact number of forces
chosen out of tho?e armed and exercised according to former order,
to the port of New York, he in the meanwhile to make all the pre-
paration he can of victuals and lodging to entertain them, and, when
they shall be arrived, to see they be well armed, and to exercise them,
and acquaint them with the way of camping and engaging, till such
time as the ships, and a commander-in-chief with them, shall come.
Again, to divert the enemy from the care of those places against
which this design is chiefly laid, that is Quebeck, and their other
places of greatest strength, a third order must yet be sent to
the Governor of New York, appointing him to raise the Indians of
the five nations, and to join with them 200 of the garrison and
forces about Albany, 200 from New England, and 100 from
Connecticut (for the obtaining whereof orders are also to be sent
him by the first ships), and to have them ready, so that on the 1st
of May they may be ready to march towards Canada ; and there,
by endeavouring, or pretending to endeavour, something that shall
tend notably to the advantage of our party and the disadvantage
of the French, as the fortifying and settling Cadaraque, or, seizing
on some French garrison, to draw down the Governor of Canada and
his forces towards them, but to take great care to keep in places
40 NEW YORK IN 1695.
of security, and not to be too active, but only while away the time,
and delude the enemy, unless he sees he can gain a considerable
advantage without any great hazard of his men.
Lastly, the commander-in-chief sent from England is to receive
his commission for this service privately from his Majesty, wherein
to be appointed commander-in-chief of all the aforesaid forces by sea
and land, as well those on Albany side as those which are to be trans-
ported by sea to Canada, with orders to sail directly for New York;
and there, embarking his forces, with all possible speed, to make
the best of his way for Canada, to prevent as much as he can any
notice the enemy may have of his coming, and with instructions to
make use of the foresaid Sanders and the others, appointed to give
him information of the country and places of landing and ad-
vantages ; to keep his soldiers from plundering, deflouring women,
drunkenness, swearing, cursing, and all other debauchery ; to pro-
ceed prudently, courageously, and valiantly, in the endeavouring
to conquer Canada, till such time as it is thoroughly subdued, and
then to return as shall be ordered and directed by his Majesty.
There are other things to be added to his instructions in case he
succeeds, which you will find couched among what follows.
In case, then, that this design succeed, his Majesty may please
to appoint the bishop proposed to be sent over governor of New
York, to be also governor of Canada, and every part and place
thereof, as it shall come to be subdued, with power to constitute a
lieutenant-governor thereof at his discretion, till such time as his
Majesty's pleasure is further known ; with power also, to appoint
and order all matters ecclesiastical, and civil, as shall be best for the
setting that province in the possession of the English.
Orders and instructions to be given, both to the bishop as
governor, and to the commander-in-chief, may [be] these : —
1. — That special and constant care be taken that the soldiers
and seamen straggle not from the camp, nor plunder the country,
burn houses, or destroy the corn, either growing or in the barn, nor
the cattle of what sort 'soever, but that they preserve all things as
in a country which it is hoped may come through God's assistance
to be their own ; and, therefore,
2. — All provisions, of what sort or nature soever, whether for
man or beast, are to be secured for and given notice of to the
NEW YORK IN 1695. 41
governor and commander-in-chief, or either of them, that they
may appoint what quantities thereof shall be sufficient for the
maintenance of the army, or the prisoners, or victualling the ships
for their voyage homeward.
3. — All prisoners are to belong to the King (slaves only ex-
cepted), to be civilly treated and used, and to be disposed of as
the governor shall appoint, which may be after this or the like
manner : — those who are of best quality, with the priests and other
religious persons, to be sent home to England by the ships of war;
two hundred families of husbandmen that are willing to stay, to be
left and settled upon reasonable and encouragable terms, as tenants
to those gentlemen and others to whom lands shall be given ; three
hundred or four hundred families more to be appointed for New York,
where, if they are willing, they may be encouraged by the bishop to
settle on vacant land, and in time may be converted to Protestantism
by French ministers sent over for that purpose, and obliged to
learn and use the English tongue and religion, and all the rest
may be divided proportionably to each province, to be carried
thither in the ships belonging thereto, where they may be en-
couraged to settle if they will, and, if it be thought for the weal of
the province to encourage them, or otherwise to be sent prisoners
to England in merchant ships, as opportunity shall present.
4. — All the ships taken in the voyage thither, or in port there,
to be condemned in the first English port they come to, and to be
disposed of by the governor there, as is appointed by law in such
cases. And all towns, forts, castles, houses, instruments of hus-
bandry, as ploughs, carts, harrows, etc. — and working cattle, as
horses, oxen, asses — and all warlike provisions, as great guns, small
'■ arms, powder, ball, swords, bagonets, etc., and the whole country,
improved, or unimproved, to belong to the King, and to be dis-
posed of by the governor as shall be best for his Majesty's interest
and advantage, and encouraging there settlement of the province,
except as in the article following.
5. — All things belonging to religion and ecclesiastics, as churches,
monasteries, nunneries, with the grounds and estates belonging to
them, as also the money, plate, books, and all things in them and
belonging to them, as horses, cows, sheep, instruments of hus-
bandry, household stuff, and also the books found any where in
42 NEW YORK IN 1695.
other houses, to be given to pious uses, and to be disposed of
by the bishop, and settled as shall seem to him best for the en-
couragement of religion in Canada, New York, or elsewhere, in
any other of the English provinces ; only to be excepted, that if
there be any goods or chattels, whether money, plate, household
stuff, or other things proved not to belong unto religious persons
or uses, but put there only for concealment and security, etc., they
are, in that case, to be delivered up, and ordered by the bishop to
be laid to the common spoil, and, as such, to be divided with the
rest among the soldiers.
6. — All other goods, not before excepted, whether money, plate,
slaves, household stuff, or merchandize, etc., shall be gathered
together and divided between the officers and soldiers, as is usual
to be done in such cases; in which division the governor shall have
an equal share with the commander-in-chief, and the rest according
to their proportion. And, for the better and more equal division, it
shall be appointed, 1st, That all men concerned in the service,
seamen or soldiers, shall have part of the spoil without being de-
frauded or cozened thereof. 2d, That the Indian goods, as duffels,
shirts, knives, hatchets, etc., be particularly set apart to be given
to our Indians as their part of the prey, and, if there be any over-
plus thereof, it shall be given to those who shall remain in the
country to trade therewith, either with our own Indians or those
of Canada, who, if they will submit quietly, shall not be suffered
to be prisoners to our Indians, but reckoned friends to us, as at
present they are to the French. 3d, That every man, of what
rank or quality soever, shall be bound to deliver up to the
common heap all the spoil he shall get of what nature soever;
and that whatsoever they shall find in houses or any other place
which they cannot bring away, they shall not spoil it, but leave
it undamaged for the benefit of those who shall afterwards come
to settle there ; and that whosoever shall offend in either of these
particulars shall, by so doing, forfeit his part of the spoil, and be
otherwise punished as the commander-in-chief shall think fit.
7. — All the arms and warlike stores taken from the French to
be carefully gathered together, and laid up in the fort of Quebeck,
and other convenient places, and there kept in good order and
condition, so as to be at all times ready for use. All places of
NEW YORK IN 1695. 43
strength and great advantage, and disabled in the taking, or any
ways in need to be better fortified, shall be duly taken care of and
fortified in the best manner that may be, and furnished with great
guns and stores convenient for the defence thereof : for which
purpose the guns and mortar-pieces carried over, together with
any taken by the way, or in harbour there, or on land, with suf-
ficient quantities of powder, ball, etc. shall be left there, to be dis-
posed of in each garrison as shall seem necessary.
For the resettlement of this province the governor may —
1. — Appoint a house and land and other conveniences for the
bishop, and houses, lands, etc. for the ministers out of those
belonging before to and set apart for that use, with schools, a
library, etc. as best may be done.
2. — Dispose of the lands, houses, instruments of husbandry, etc.
on such terms and with such provisions as shall be reasonable and
proper for the King's profit, the landlord's advantage, the tenant's
* encouragement, and the clergy's maintenance ; and that, first, to
those of the soldiery from England, who, being married, will settle
there and send for their wives over; and, second, to those who
being unmarried, and of those soldiers or of the forces come from
any of the neighbouring provinces, and desirous to settle and
marry there any of the French maids or widows (such as they can
prevail with), to every man according to his quality, place, and
merit, and as shall seem best to the governor.
3. — Send to England, desiring encouragement may be given to
the French Protestants to come over and settle there with their
families, which it is believed many of them will willingly do, if
they be assured to have lands, houses, etc. given to them on
reasonable terms, as it is intended they shall. And this is the
method which I promised to lay down as proper for the subduing
and resettlement of Canada ; which, if it be not so complete as it
ought to be, or not likely to be so effectual as I hoped it might, in
the judgment of understanding persons, if yet it will serve but as
the first lines of a draught, or a motive only to able heads to do
better, I shall not only be contented, but very glad, and not think
that I have lost my labour.
SOLI DEO GLORIA.
CATALOGUE OF BOOKS,
CON818TING OF A COLLECTION OF
VOYAGES AND TRAVELS
IN VARIOUS PARTS OF THE WORLD
INCLUDING AN
EXTENSIVE SERIES RELATING TO THE SEVERAL COUNTRIES
OF
AMERICA.
ON SALE, AT THE PRICES AFFIXED, FOR READY MONEY ONLY,
BY
THOMAS EODD,
No. 9, GREAT NEWPORT STREET, LONG ACRE,
LONDON.
LONDON :
PRINTED BY COMPTON AND RITCHIE, MIDDLE STREET, CLOTH FAIR.
MDCCCXLIII.
^A*i<L^h*i-(
CONTENTS.
Page
Geography 21
Collections of Voyages, Circumnavigators, and general
Travellers 27
Australasia 31
Voyages and Travels for the discovery of a North East and
North West passage 33
Voyages and Travels in various parts of Europe 35
Voyages and Travels in Turkey and the Levant, Syria, and
Palestine ; and History of the Turkish Empire 40
Arabia, and History of the Arabians and Saracens 48
Asia and Asiatic History 48
Persia 49
India 51
Russia, Siberia, and Tartary 60
China and Japan 61
Africa 63
Egypt, Ancient and Modern 67
America and American History 70
Geography. 21
GEOGRAPHY.
399 Abbott (Abp.) Briefe Description of the whole World, en-
graved title, containing port, by Marshall, 3s 12mo, 1634
400 Abulfedae Tabulae quiedam Geographical, Arabice et Latine,
cum notis Wiistenfeld, 2s 6d . 8vo, 1835
401 Albertiis Magnus, de natura locorum, 2s 6d 4to, Vienn. 1514
402 Aliaoo (Petrus de) Ymago Mundi, seu ejus ymaginaria de-
scriptio. Epilogus mappe mundi. Tractatus de legibus et
sectis. Tractatus de correctione kalendarii. Cosmographia.
De concordia astronomies veritatis et narrationis hystorice.
Opuscula Jo. Gerson, adjunxiraus que ad eandem materiam
pertineant, old russia, 18s
fol. without place or date (circa mcccclxxx)
403 Antonini Augusti Itinerarium Provinciarum, 2s 6d 8vo, Lugd.
404 Atlas Maritimus et Commercialis, or a general View of the
World so far as it relates to Trade and Navigation, with
a set of Sea- Charts, according to a new globular projection,
the use justified by Dr. Halley, maps, 9s atlas fol. 1728
405 Atlas Pontus Euxinus, with the course of the Tanais, on sixteen
sheets, bound, 7s . . fol. 1699
406 De Baschkiris quae memoriae prodita sunt ab Ibn-Foslano et
Jakuta interprets Fraehnio, 2s 6d • 4to
407 Baudrandi (M. A.) Novum Lexicon Geographicum, 2 volt in 1,
6s . fol. Ven. 1738
408 Boemus, Mores, leges, et ritus omnium gentium, 2s Antv. 1538
409 Boemus, another edition, Is 6d 12mo, 1561
410 Boemus, another edition, 2s . 12mo, 1582
41 X Bordone, l'Isolario, nel quel si ragiona di tutte Pisole del
mondo, con la giouta del monte del oro (Peru) nuovamente
ritrovato, curious maps, 8s fol. Vineg. 1547
412 Bory de St. Vincent (S. B. G. M.) Essais sur les Isles For-
tunes et PAntique Atlantide, plates y 5s 4to, Par. 1801
41 3 Braun, Theatre des Cites du Monde : Views of the principal
Cities and Towns in various Countries of Europe ; among
them occur London, Oxford, Cambridge, Bristol, and other
English Cities, 2 vol. £1 15s fol. Colog. 1574
^1 4 Carpenter (N.) Geographie delineated, 3s 6d 4to, 1635
^1 5 Cella? (Ancelmum atq ; Christ oph.jEuropse descriptio— De fide
et moribus ^Ethiopum, 4s 6d 12mo, Antw. 1536
416 Cestii (P. B.) Orbis Terrarum synoptica epitome una cum Geo-
graphia Poetica, 4s . 8vo, 1589
417 Chappuys (G.) l'Estat, Description et Gouvernement des Roy-
aumes et Republiqucs du Monde, original gilt vellum bind-
ing, 7s 6d . fol. Par. 1598
D
22 Geography, [Historical
■118 I 'luvcni Introductions in m.iversani Gf^raplnam. lib. vi. Is Gil
ISno, Eh, 16?2
419 Dalryniple, Collection of Charts and Memoirs, 7s
4to, privately printed, 1772
420 Dalryniple ( A.) Collection of < 'hurts and Memoirs relating to
the Islands, Seas, Currents, &c. of India and China, 2 vol.
11 Is . . 4to, 1786
4^1 D'Auville, Eclaircissemeuts gcographiques siir l'ancieuue Gaule,
2s 12mo,Pfl7-. 1741
;s et modernes,
Svo, 1769
423 D'Auville, Preface and Introduction to the Map of Italy, Is 6d
4to
424 D'Auville, Geographic Aaeien abregee, 3 torn, calf, 4s 6d
12mo, 1768
425 D'Anville, Etats formes en Europe apres la chute de l'empire
Itomain en Occident, 2s Gd 4to, Par. 1771
426 D'Aiivilli-, ('uNsii]er;itions sur 1'iHude el le coiiuoissani.es que
deinande la composition des outrages de Geographic, 2s
8vo, 1777
427 Notice des ourages de M. D'Anville preeedee de son Eloge, 2s
8vo, 1802
428 Dicearco da Messina, I frammenti di, raccolti, e illustrati da
Celid. Errante, Greco ed Hat. 4s Gd Svo, Palermo, 1822
429 Dionysins de Situ Orbis, ab Ant. Hcrharie traductus, 2s 6d
4to, Venet. Franc, rentier de Hailbrun, MCCCCLXXVIU
430 Dionysins de Situ Orbis, Gr. et Lat. 2s Antv. Plant. 1575
431 Dionysii Gcographia, a Wells, 2s . 8vo, 1709
432 Du Eiesnoy, Geograplun Antique et nova, or a System of an-
tient and modern Geography, map. 1 !, 2s 6d 4to, 1742
433 Les Etats, Empires, elPriiicipaute/ du monde, repreBentez par le
Description de pays, moeurs des habitans, &c. (very curious
description of the manners of the English) 3s 6d4to, Par. 1G22
434 Explication do la Mappe Monde, extraite par le Sieur Denis, Is6d
12mo, Par. 1764
435 Evrenius (Joan.) Atlantica Orientalis, 4s Svo, BeroL 1764
436 Fage (K.) Description ofthe whole world, lsGd 12mo. 16*3
437 Favolius (Hug.) Thealri Orbis Terrarum Enchiridio miuoribus
Tabulis per Ph. Gallium exaratum in carmine Iieroico, 5s 6d
4to, Antwerp, 1585
438 Francisci, Monaclii, Epistola de Orbis situ, ac descriptione. In
que Ptoloniiei, cieterorumq, siiperiorum geographorum hailu-
cinatio rel'ellitur, aliaque praiterea de recens inventis, terris,
mari, insulis, 3s . . 12oio, 1565
439 Free (D. J.) The Loudon Geography, to which is added a
translation of the Periegesis ollJioiivsius, in blank verse, by
B. D. Free, setoed, 2s , l2mo, 1789
440 Galatei Liber de situ Iapygia-, 3s 8vo, Basil. 1558
-
Literature.] Geography. 23
441 Garcic (Pierre) Le grant Routier pilotage et Encrage de Mer.
Taut des parties de Prance, Bretaigne, Angleterre, que haultes
Allemaignes, Les dangers de Portz, Havres, Rivieres et
Chenels des regions snsdictz, lettres Gothiques, wormed, rare,
15s 4to, Rouen, 1557
442 Gbographlk teteris Scriptorbs Gneci minoris. cam intern.
latina, Dissert ac annotationibus, cura Hudson, 4 vol. £6 os
8vo, Oxon. 1698-17031712
443 Geograpbia Nubiensis, Arabice. Sir Kenelm Digby's copy,
with his autograph and arms impressed upon the cover, 12s
4to, Roma, 1591
444 Varia Geographica — Gronovius de Gothomm sede originaria,
eommdemqoe in imp. Rom. irruptionibus. Hagenbuch, Ex-
cercit qua Ostiones, nee Germanise, nee Britannia? populum,
sed Galfiae Celticae Osismios esse conjicitur, &c. 3s 6d 8vo, 1 739
445 Goadby (R.) Entertaining Account of all tbe countries in the
known World, plates, 2s 6d 8vo, Sherborne, 1752
446 Goerius (I. G.) Geograpbia Academica, calf extra by Lewis, 5s
8vo, Norimb. 1789
447 Goncales de Salus (J. A.) de duplici viventium terra Dissertatio,
3s . 4to, L. B. 1650
448 Hales (S.) Philosophical Experiments: containing useful and
necessary instructions for such as undertake long voyages at
Sea, 2s . 8vo, 1739
449 Heylyn (P.) Cosmographie ; containing the chorographie and
Historie of the whole world, 6s tol. 1669
450 Honter (J.) Rudimenta Cosmographica, with maps, 2s
12mo, Tig. 1548
451 Howell (J.) Instructions and directions for Forren Travel, with
a new appendix for travelling into Turkey and tbe Levant,
2s 6d . . 12mo, 1650
452 Huet, Histoire du Commerce et de la Navigation des Anciens,
"Mr. Addison's book? 2s 12mo, Paris, 1716
453 Relations of the most famous kingdoms and commonweales
through the world, trans, by R. I., calf, 10s 6d 1608
454 Johnson (R.) Relations of tbe most famous kingdoms and
commonweales throughout the world, 2s 6d 4to, 1611
455 Klaproth, Recherches sur les ports du Gampon et de Zaithoum
decrits par Marco- Polo, Is 6d • 8vo, 1824
456 Koenigsmann, De Aristotelis Geograpbia, Prolusiones sex, 2s 6d
4to, Slesv. 1803
457 Landmann (G.) Universal Gazetteer, bds. 5s 6d 8vo, 1835
458 Lima (L. Caetano de) Geografia Historica de todos os estados
soberanos de Europe, 2 vol. 15s 4to, Usb. 1734
459 Ldwenorn, Description of a new improved Chart of the Islands
of Shetland, 2s 6d 4to, Copenhagen. 1787
460 Maupertius, Elemens de Geographic, 2s ovo, 1740
461 Pomponius Mela de Orbis situ libri UK et C. Julii Solini Poly*
histor, maps, 3s 6d 8vo, Basil. 1576
9, Great Newport Street.]
■'I
a i
■:/''"/•'"/■
[IilSTC
169 ruinponiiiB Mc-la, <lc silu orbis, cum Comment.
maailciil title by Holbein, and map of the World, with ihe. dis-
coreries of Ame.ricit s I'espuciux, 3s fol. llasil. 1523
463 PomponiusMelade situ Orbis, iiotis V'ossii, large paper, 5s 6d
4to, 1658
464 Mela (Pomponius) De Situ Orbis, A. Schottus recensutt, with
many MS. notes by Sr/tottus, and a map lively executed by
P. fortius, citlf.mat, £1 8s Antv. Plant. 1582
'1(15 Pomponii Mela; do situ Orbis libri tn-s; ad omnium Atlgli* et
Hiberniw MSS. tidem summa cura ct dilige-ntia recogniti,
studio J. Reinoldii, 3s . 4to, Eton. 1 814
466 Pomponio Mela Conipendio Geographico i Historico tie el
orbe antiguo. aborn, con tiuevii i varia Illustracion, restituido
a la suia Espanoia, por J. A. Gonzalez de Salas, 5s
4to, Mad. 1644
4f,7 MeletiiGeographiaantiquaet nova, Grate, 10s 6dtbl. Ten. 1728
W) Memuires et Observations Geograpliiques et critiques sur la
situation des pays septeut.rionaux de 1'Asie et de I'Amerique,
map, 5s . . 4to, Laus. 1765
470 Mercatoris Atlas, editio secunda qua et ampliores descriptions*
et novai Tabulaa Geographies acceiienint, the lemt fa French,
14s . . fid. Amst. 1609
471 Mercafor's Atlas ; containing bis cosmn graphical description of
the world, Englished by Saltonshall, maps, 6s fol. 1637
472 Michadis (J. D.) Spicilpgium Geographic Hebraeorura exteraj
post Bochartum, 4s 6<f 4to, Gott. 1769
473 Muller, Voyage from Asia to America for completing; the Dis-
coveries of the N. W. Coastof America, by Jeffreys, maps, 6s
4to, 1761
474 Munz, Exercitatio de Insulin natantibus, 3s 4to, Altorf. 1711
475 Murr. Diploma tischu Gescbichtc des Porluguesischen berhuniten
Ritters Martins Behaims, plan, 2s 6d 12mo, Nurnb, 1778
47li Myritii (Jo.) Opusculuni Geographicum, port, aud woodcuts,
*6s6d . . fol. IngoUt. 1590
477 Ortelius's Theatre of the World, in English, the maps
loured, calf, neat, £1 Is
478 Ortelius, Epitome Theatri Ortelia
num delineationes minoribus tabulis
fol- 1606
i Orbis Regio-
s espressas, russia, 5s
oblong 8vo, Antv. 1589
479 Epitome Theatrum Orteliani, interleaved with mathematical dia-
grams, 4s 6d 8vo, oblong. Antwerp, 1601
480 Or'telius (A.) his Epitome of the Theater of the Worlde. dedi-
cated to Sir W. Raleigh, maps, Gs oblong 8vo, 1603
481 Peritsol (A.) Itinera Mundi, sic dicta nempe CoBinograpliia.
Heb. Lalina versionc donavit et notas adjeeit T. Hyde, calce
expntiitiir Turcaruin Liturgia, perigriuatio Meccana. titc. 5s fid
4tn. Ox. 1691
482 Perkins (R.) Elements of Ancient Geography, Is fid Svo, 1797
[T.
Literature.] Geography. 25
481 Paullini (C. F.) Geographia Curiosa, seu de Pagis Antiqua
praesertim Germanise Commentarius, 4s 6d 4to, Francf 1699
484 Pinet (A. du) Plantz, Pourtraitz et descriptions de plusiers
Villes et Forteresses tant de l'Europe, Asie, et Afrique, que
des Indes, et terres neuves, views engraved in wood, fine copy,
scarce, £2 2s . fol. Lyon, 1564
485 Pio II, La Discrittione de l'Asia et Europa, con l'aggionta de
P Africa secondo diversi scrittori, ruled with red lines, gilt
leaves, 3s . . 8vo, Vineg. 1544
486 Pins II. tineas Silvius in Europam., 3s
4to, without -place or date (circa 1480)
487 Phylo Byzantius de Septem orbis spectaculis, Leonis Allatii
Opera, Gr. et Lat. vellum, 5s 8vo, Roma?, 1640
488 Plutarch, Libellus de Fluviorum et Montiura nominibus et de
his quae in illis inveniuntur, Gr. Lat. per J. Maussacus, 2s 6d
8vo, Tol. 1615
489 Porcacchi (Thorn.) Isole piu famose del Mondo, intagliate da
Girol. Porro, 3s 6d fol. Venetia, 1572
490 Postelli Cosmographica Disciplina, 2s 18mo, L. B. 1636
491 Ptolomei Geographia, large charts engraved in wood and cop-
per, the first being the map of the world, wants a portion of
the corners, 18s fol. Ulma Reger, mcccclxxxvi
492 PtholoMjEI Geographia, maps neatly engraved on copper plates,
and a double set of very elegant woodcut initial letters, £1 10s
fol. Rom. 1507
493 Ptolemjei Geographia, a Mich. Villanovi recogniti, maps cut
in wood, coloured ; it contains maps of America, and an
account of Columbus, 16s fol. Vien. 1541
494 Ptolomaei Geographia, maps, Basil. 1542— Descriptions Pto-
lemaicse augment urn, sive Occidentis descriptio, studio C.
Wytfliet, with a series of maps of America, Lovan. 1597 ;
1 vol. £1 5a . . fol.
495 Ramussen, De Arabum Persarumque commercio cum Russia et
Scandinavia Medio Mvo, 3s 4to, Hann. 1825
496 Roberts (Lewes) The Merchants Mapp of Commerce, necesarie
for all such as shal be imployed in the publique afaires of
Princes in foraine parts, &c. port, engraved title, and map
surrounded by portraits of the circumnavigators, fine copy %
10s 6d . fol. 1638
• # * This Yolume was ushered into the world with rerses by various persons, ,
among whose names appears that of Iz. Walton.
497 Sardus (Alex.) de Moribus ac Ritibus Gentium, 6s
8vo, Venet. Ziletti, 1557
498 Schlichthorst, Geographia Homeri, 3s 4to, Gott. 1787
499 Schoenemann, Commentatio de Geographia Argonautarum, 3s
4to, ib. 1788
500 Schonerus (Jo.) Opusculum Geographicum. (De Insulis circa
Asiam ac Indiam et novas regiones Brasilia nova Terra
annotatio, &c.) 7s 6d 4to, 1532
9, Great Newport Street.] T£
Qtagraoky.
501 Scylacis Caryaudeusis Penplus,
Euxini, Gr. et Lat. a Vossiua, 7s
• This copy belonged to Dr. Benlkr. mid I
[Historical
loony mi Peri pi us Pout in
4to, 1639
s his milogrnph initials on the
502 Stftftwrle(R.) Geographical Description of the World, 3»4to,1618
603 Stenbeck, Disserfatio de mentis Scandianorum priscorum in
commercia et Navigationem, 2a 4to, Land. Goth. 1752
504 Strabonib Geographic, Gr. Lat. cumnotis Casauboni et alio rum,
eatf extra, marbled leaves, £1 lis 6d fol. Amst. 1707
505 Thorisi, Theatre of the Earth ; DescriptioniofallCountries.il!
form of a Dictionary, 3s 6d 4to, 1602
506 Ukert, Geographic et Uranologic Herodotec apecimina, 2s 6d
4to, Helms. 1804
507 Ulloa, Converaaciones con sus hijos aobre laa Navigaciones y
modo de hacerlaa, morocco, gilt leaves. 7s 8vo, Mad. 1795
508 Uylenbroek, Disscrtatin rlt- I Im Kaukati Geographi, et Deacriptio
Iracc Persicc, Lugd. Bat. 1822 — Hamaker, Diatribe Philo-
logico- Critic a Monumeiitorum aliquot Puni coram, noper in
Africa repertorum, interp. exhibens, L.B. 1783; 2 vol. in 1,
MS. notes by Hamaker, 18s . 4to
509 Vadiani (J.) Epitome tritiui Terram partium Asic, Africa et
Europe, compendtariain Locorum descriptionem continens,
woodcut maps, 8s . fol. Tigttr. 1534
510 Vadiani (Joach.) Epitomre triam Tern partium Asiae, Africa;,
et Europe compend. prccipue autum quorum in Actis Lucas
meminere, 5s . . fol <i. 1534
511 Vaugondy, Essai sur 1'Histoire de la Geographi e, '2s 12nm. 175.3
512 Varenii Geographia Generalis, Is 6d 12mo, Amst. Els. 1664
513 Varenius (Bernliard) G eogra] ill y, improved and illustrated by
Sir Isaac Newton and Dr. Turin, trans, by Dugdale,2 vol. 3s
8vo, 1733
514 Violerii (P.) Oratio de multiplici Geographic usu ac prcstantia,
2s . . 4to, Qstuv. 1704
515 Violerii (P.) Dissertatio de artiGciaii Geographia; objecto, 2s
4to,iiS. 1714
516 Vosgien Dictionnaire Geographique, par J. D. Goigoux, 3s
8vo, Paris, 1823
517 Wagenaer (L. J.) Speculum Nauticum navigations maris occi-
dentalis confecturus pars prima continens oras maritimas
Gallia?. Hispanic et prccipuarum partium Anglic in diversis
mappia compreliensiiui. 8s fol. Leyd. 1583
618 Werlauff, Symbolc ad Geographiam medii j^Lvi, ex monumeutis
Islandicis, 3s 6d . 4to, Havn. 1821
519 Worceater (J. E.) Sketches of the Earth and its Inhabitants,
plates, 2 vol. 5s 6d 12mo, Boston, 1823
544 Zeigleri Tabulc GeogrftphicteSyria,Paleatii)a, Arabia, zEgypta.
Schondia, Holmic civitatis regie Suetia?, Deplorabilis eioidii
CliristLernum Datic cimbricc regem historic, Jtitdy cut in
wood, 7g 6d . fol. Argent. 153
CT."
m£S
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels. 27
591 Zurla (P.) II Mappa Mondo di Fra Mauro descritto ed illus-
trato, 6s . fol. Venez. 1806
522 Zurla, Commentario guile antiche Mappe Idro-Geografiche
lavorate in Venezia, maps, 5s 6d 4to, 1818
COLLECTIONS OF VOYAGES; CIRCUMNAVIGATORS, AND
GENERAL TRAVELLERS.
523 Gerbier (Sir B.) Subsidium Peregrinantibus, or an Assistance
to a Traveller in his convers with Hollanders, Germans, Vene-
tians, Italians, &c. 3s 6d 12mo, Oxford, 1665
524 Graherus (D.) Discursas de Peregrinatione Studiosorum, sewed,
4s . . 4to, Argent. 1625
525 Howell (J.) Instructions for Forreine Travell, 2s 6d 1642
526 Hard (B.) Dialogues on the Uses of Foreign Travel, Is 6d
8vo, 1764
527 Palmer (T.) An Essay of the meanes how to make our Travailes
into forraine countries the more profitable and honourable,
5s 6d . . 4to, 1606
528 Tucker (J.) Instructions for Travellers, 2s 6d 8vo, 1758
529 Zuingerus (T.) Methodus Apodemica, 2s 6d 4to, Basil. 1577
530 Abu Taleb Khan's Travels in Asia, Europe, and Africa, 1799-
1803, by C. Stewart, 2 vol. calf, 6s 8vo, 1810
531 Anson (George Lord) Voyage round the World, by Walter,
plates, calf, 10s 6d . 4to, 1748
532 Astley, or Green, Collection of Voyages and Travels in Europe,
Asia, Africa, and America, maps and plates, 4 vol. j£1 Is
4to, 1745
533 Betagh (W.) Voyage round the World begun in 1719, 3s
8vo, 1757
534 Bouchard de la Richarderie, Bibliotheque universelle des Voyages,
6 vol. sewed, 14s . 8vo, Paris, 1808
535 Bougainville, Voyage autour du Monde, 2 torn. 4s 8vo, 1772
536 Buache (P.) Considerations Geographiques, et Physiques, sur
leg nouvelles decouvertes au Nord du Mer du Sua, calf, 5s 6d
4to, Paris, 1753
537 Burbury (J.) Relation of Lord Howard's Journey from London
to Vienna and Constantinople, 1671 — Caron's Description of
Japan and Siara, 1671 — Frejus's Voyage to Mauritania, 1671
— Travels of Giacorao Baratti into Ethiopia, 1670; 1 vol.
Ritson's autograph, 12s 12mo
.538 Careri (Gemelli) Voyage autour du Monde, plates, 6 vol. calf,
10s 6d 12mo, Paris, 1727
539 Cespedes (A. G.) Regimiento de Navigacion, £1 5s fol. 1606
%• This book contains some of the early Voyages to America.
540 Churchill's Collection of Voyages and Travels into all parts
of the World, some now first printed from the original manu-
scripts, plates, 6 vol. neat, £2 10s fol. 1732
9, Cheat Newport Street.]
I
28 Voyages and Travels. [HISTORICAL
541 Clousier, Voyage curieux qui fait le tour da Monde, 8s
4to, Paris, 1664
542 Colnett's Voyage to the South Atlantic and round Cape Horn
into the Pacific Ocean, maps, half morocco, 6s 4 to, 1798
543 Cooke (Capt. Edward) Voyage to the South Sea and round the
World in 1708-9-10-11 ; with account of Alex. Selkirk, his
manner of living four years and four months on the unin-
habited island of Juan Fernandez, maps and plates, 2 vol. 8s
8vo,17l2
544 Coxe (W.) Account of the Russian discoveries between Asia
and America, the conquest of Siberia, and Russian trade with
China, maps, 5s 6d . 8vo, 1803
545 Dalrymple (A.) Historical Collection of Voyages and Discoveries
in the S. Pacific Ocean, maps, 2 vol. 8s 4to, 1770
546 Dalrymple's Letter to Dr. Ha wkes worth, occasioned by some
illiberal imputations in his account of the late Voyages to
the South, 2s . 4to, 1773
547 Dampier ( W.) Collection of Voyages round the World, maps
and plates, 4 vol. calf, £1 14s 8vo, 1729
548 Descriptio Itineris Navalis in Indiana Orientalem, earumque
rerum quae navibus Batavis Occurrerunt, plates, Amst. 1598
— Diarium Nauticum seu vera descriptio trium Navigationum
admirandarum tribus continuis annis factarum, a Hollandicis
et Zelandicis navibus ad Septentrionem, turn ut detecta fue-
rint Weygatz fretum, Nova Zembla, &c. auctore Gerardo de
Vera, plates, Amst 1598; 2 vol. in 1, morocco, £2 2s fol.
549 Dixon, Voyage round the World, more particularly to the N. W.
coast of America, maps and plates, calf, 6s 4to, 1789
550 Eden, the History of Travayle in the West and East Indies, and
other countryes lying either way towardes the fruitfull and
rich Moluc caes, augmented by R. Willes, £2 2s 4to, 1577
551 Forster (G.) Voyage round the World with Captain Cook,
plates, 2 vol. calf, 10s 6d . 4to, 1777
552 Fransham (J.) The World in Miniature, or the Entertaining
Traveller, plates, 2 vol. 3s 12mo, 1740
453 Frezier, Relation du Voyage de la mer du Sud, aux cotes du
Chili, du Perou et du Bresil, plates, 2 vol. 3s 6d
12mo, Amst 1717
554 Frezier, Voyage to the South-Sea, with a postscript by Dr.
Halley, and an account of the Settlement of the Jesuits in
Paraguay, plates, 5s 6d . 4to, 1717
555 Froger, Relation of a Voyage on the coasts of Africa, Straights
of Magellan, Brasil, Cayenna, and the Antilles, by Mr. de
Gennes, plates, 2s 6d . 8vo, 1698
556 Froger, Relation d'un Voyage de la Mer du Sud, detroit de
Magellan et les isles Antilles, plates, 2s 6d Amst 1715
557 Hacke (W.) Collection of original Voyages: Cowley's round
the World — Sharp's over the Isthmus of Darien — Wood's
through the Straights of Magellan, &c. maps, 4s 6d 8vo, 1699
[T. Rodd,
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels. 29
558 Hakluyt, the principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques, and
Discoveries of the English nation, new edition, with additions,
large paper, 6 vol. russia 9 marbled leaves, £8 8s fol. 1802
559 Hamilton (6.) Voyage round the World in the Pandora, with
the discoveries made in the South Sea, portrait, 2s 6d
8vo, Berwick, 1793
560 Harris, Collection of Voyages and Travels to all parts of the
World, plates, 2 vol. 15s . fol. 1705
561 Harris (J.) Complete Collection of Voyages and Travels, con-
sisting of above six hundred of the most authentic writings,
* maps and plates , 2 vol. calf, £1 5s fol. 1764
562 Halsius (L.) Neundte Schiffart, von den Holl-und Seelandern in
Ost-Indien anno 1604 und 1605, plates, 3s 6d 4to, Franc.1612
563 Jefferys (T.) Voyages from Asia to America for completing the
discoveries of the N. W. coast of America, maps, 1764 — Ob-
servations and Facts to shew the probability of a Northern
passage, 1776 — Dalrymple's collection of Voyages in the
Southern Atlantic, 1775— Journal of a Voyage round the
World in the Endeavour, 1771 ; in 1 vol. 10s 6d 4to
564 Johnson (C.) History of the Pyrates, with remarkable actions
and adventures of two Female Pyrates, Mary Read and Anne
Bonney, plates, 2 vol. 10s . 8vo, 1726
565 Journal of a Voyage round the World in the Dolphin, com-
manded by Commodore Byron, 2s 8vo
566 Kent Narration of the loss of the Kent, East Indiaman, in the
Bay of Biscay, Is 6d . 12mo, Edin. 1825
567 LETTRE8 Edifiantes et curieuscs ecrites des Missions etran-
geres, 26 vol. calf, £2 18s . 12mo, 1810
568 LIN8CHOTEN, Voyages into the East and West Indies, fcladt
Utter, engraved title and all the twelve maps, red morocco, by
Lewis, gilt leaves, very fine copy, £5 15s 6d folio
569 Macdonald (J. ) Travels in Europe, Asia, and Africa, 4s 8vo, 1790
570 Mackay's Narrative of the Shipwreck of the Juno on the coast
of Aracan, 1798 — Narrative of the loss of the Lady Hobart
Packet on an island of Ice in the Atlantic, 1803, 2s 8vo
571 Mackintosh, Travels in Europe, Asia, and Africa, 2 vol. calf,
5s 6d . . . 8vo, 1782
573 Voyages de M. de Monconys en divers pais de 1' Europe, Asie,
et Afrique, 5 vol. calf, gilt leaves, 18s 12mo, 1695
574 Morisotus (C.) Orbis Maritimi sive rerum in Mari et littoribus ges-
tarura Generalis Historia, plates, vel. 14s fol. Divione, 1643
575 Narborough's Voyage to the S. Sea — Tasman's Voyage to Terra
Incognita — Wood's attempt to discover a N.E. passage to
China — F. Marten's Voyage to Spitzbergen, maps and plates,
5s 8vo, 1724
577 Ortega (C. de) Viage del Comandante Byron al rededor del
Mundo, trad, y iliustrado con notas sobre nunchos puntos de
Geographica de Historia Natural, &c. map, 3s 6d
4to, Mad. 1769
9, Great Newport Street.]
30 md fmrc/s.
676 Ordonez, deCevallob Viagr del N
[Historical
do, porh nit. rart, £\ 5s
4t.o, Mud. 1614
578 Parkinson (S.) Voyage to tbe South Seas in the Endeavour,
■plains (with the focubularies of several Languages of the
S. Sea Islands), 7» 6d 4to, 1773
379 Perouse, Voyage round the World, plates, 2 vol, boards, with
atlas infalio, 16s . 4to, 1799
580 Phillip (Governor) Voyage to Botany Bay, with account of the
Colonies of Port Jackson and Norfolk Island, maps and
plates, calf, 6s . . 4to, 1790
581 Pinto. Voyages advanture-ux de Fernand Mendei Pinto, calf, ?s
Ato, Paris, 1628
582 Portlock, Voyage round the World, maps and plates, the
Natural History coloured, ids. 6s 4to, 1789
583 PuiiciJAS'sPiLGRiMESand Pn.GiUMAGE.aCollection oFVoyages
and Travels, 5 vol. frontispiece, blue morocco, gill leaves, fine
copy, £40 . . fol. 1625-26
584 Relation del ultimo Viage al Eslrecho de Magallanes de la Fra-
gata Santa Maria de la Cabezaen loa aiio* de 1785 y 1786,
red morocco, 18s . 4to, Mad. 1788
585 Reynolds, Voyage of the U. S. Frigate Potomac round the
World, 1831-34, plates, boards, 9s f8vo, New York, 1835
586 Rogers (W.) Cruising Voyage round the World, with account
of Alex. Selkirk's living alone four years and four months in
an island, plates, 5a . 8vo, 1726
587 Shelvocke (G.) Voyage round the World by way of the South
Sea, map, 2s 6d . 8vo, 1736
588 Shillibeer, Narrative of the Britton's Voyage to Pitcaim's Island,
plates, 2s 6d . 8vo, Taunton, 1817
589 Shipwreck. Lamentable News from Sea. a true relation how a
Ship call'd the Cherry was cast away, &c. 2s 6d 4to, 1677
590 btgfeJMld'i Narrative of the Loss of the Centaur, Is 8vo, 1783
591 Sta?hlin (.1. von) Account of the new Northern Archipelago,
lately discovered by the Russians in the Seas of Kamkschatka,
2s 6d . . Svo
592 Stevens (.1.) Collection of Voyages and Travels : — Argeusola's
Description of the Molucca and Philippine Islands — Lawsou's
Carolina— Cieia's Travels in Peru, Slc. maps, 2 vol. 18s
4to, 1711
593 Thunberg, Travels in Europe, Africa, and Asia, 1770-79,
plahs of natural history, 8(c. 4 vol. calf, 10a 1795
594 Uring (Capt. N.) History of his Voyages and Travels in Ame-
rica, the West India Islands, &c. maps, 3s 6d 8vo, 1726
595 Voyage de Seigneur de Villamont dans ('Europe, l'Asie, et
1'Afriquf, 7s . Svo, 1602
596 VnjOENT, The Commerce and Navigation of the Ancients in the
Indian Ocean, 2 vol. calf, £1 5s 4to, 1807
597 Vogel (H.) Dertigjaarige Zecreizcii, 3 vol. boards, 3s 6d
Svo, Ha tie, '
&2X,
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels. 31
598 Voyage round the World in his Majesty's Ship Endeavour in
the Years 1768, 9, 70, 71, neat, 4s 6d 4to, 1771
599 Voyage a lisle de France, a PIsle de Bourbon, au Gap de
Bonne-Esperance, &c. 2 vol. 3s 6d 8vo, 1773
600 Voyages. Histoire de la Navigation auut Indes Orientales par
fes Hollandois — Description des trois Voyages per derriere
Norwege, Moscovie, et Tartaric, vers les Royaumes de China
et Catay, plates, 18s . fol. AmsL 1598
601 Voyages round the World, Dampier and others, 4 vol. 1 703
— Funnell, 1707— Cooke, 1712— Rogers, 1712-Shelvock,
2 vol. 1726— Betagh, 1728— Anson, Byron, Bulkely, and
Thomas; in all, 14 vols, maps and plates, £1 14s 8vo
602 Voyages and Discoveries to the South and North, the vast
Tracts of Land beyond Hollandia Nova, &c. maps and plates,
3s 6d . . 8vo, 1694
603 Voyages undertaken by the Dutch E. India Company for the
Improvement of Trade and Navigation, maps, 3s 6d 8vo, 1703
604 Voyages. Recueil des Voyages qui ont servi a l'etablisse-
ment et aux progrez de la Compagnie des Indes Orientales,
formee dans les Provincies-Unies, plates, 12 vol. neat, £1 Is
12mo, 1725
605 Voyages. General Collection of Voyages and Travels from
the commencement of the Portuguese discoveries to the pre-
sent time, ports, and maps, vol. 1 (all published), containing
the voyages of the Portuguese and Spaniards, 6s 4to, n. d.
AUSTRALASIA.
606 Account of the Mutinous Seizure of the Bounty, Is 6d 8vo(1790)
607 Australian Politics. Statement and Correspondence relating
to a charge of illegal punishment preferred against Dr.
Douglass, at Paramatta, Sydney, 1828 — Remarks on Trial by
Jury and a Representative Assembly in N. S. Wales, 1831 —
Stephen's Reply to Gen. Darling's Statement, 1832— Trial of
R. Robison on an indictment preferred by Lieut.-Gen. Dar-
ling, 1834 — Party Politics exposed, Sydney, 1834 — Capt.
Robison's Letters to the Members, of the H. of C. 1835 —
Hall's Rights of Juries, ib. 1835, 7s 8vo
608 Bligh (W.) Narrative of the Mutiny on board the Bounty, 2s 6d
4to, 1790
609 Bligh (Lieut. W.) Voyage to the South Sea, with charts, fyc.
4s 6d . . 4to, 1792
610 Bond (G.) Account of the Colony of Port- Jackson in New South
Wales, Is 6d . 8vo, 1809
611 Cunningham (P.) Two Years in New South Wales, 2 vol. boards,
3s . . 8vo, 1827
612 Cunningham (P.) Two Years in New South Wales, 2 vol. calf,
9s . . 8vo, 1827
9, Great Newport Street.]
32 Voyages and Travels. [HISTORICAL
613 Historical Account of New Holland and N. S. Wales, map.
Is6d . . 8vo, 1786
614 Historical Account of the colony of New South Wales and its
dependent Settlements, with plates engraved by W. Preston,
a convict, from designs by Capt. Wallis, boards, 10s 6d
fol. 1821
615 Hunter (J.) Historical Journal of the Transactions at Port Jack-
son and Norfolk Island, with the discoveries since the publi-
cation of Phillips's Voyage, maps and plates, calf, 10s
4to, 1795
616 Lang, View of the Origin and Migrations of the Polynesian
Nation, 3s . 8vo, 1834
617 Mariner (W.) Account of the Natives of the Tonga Islands,
with Grammar and Vocabulary of their Language, 2 vol.
boards, 9s . 8vo, 1818
618 Mudie (J.) Vindication from certain Reflections through the
Colonial Secretary of New South Wales, relative to the treat-
ment of Convict Servants, 2s 8vo, Sydney, 1834
619 Parliamentary Report on the Colony of New South Wales, 4s 6d
fol. 1822
620 New South Wales. Remarks with reference to the Introduc-
tion of Trial by Jury and a representative Assembly in the
Colony of N. S. W. Is 6d . 8vo, 1831
621 New South Wales, Emigrants Guide to. Is 8vo, 1832
622 Nicholas, Voyage to New Zealand, 2 vol. 4s 6d , 8vo, 1817
623 O'Hara, History of New South Wales, 4s 8vo, 1817
624 Philip (A.) Voyage to Botany Bay, with account of the esta-
blishment of the colonies of Port Jackson and Norfolk Island,
plates, calf 10s 6d . 4to, 1789
625 Sydney : A Letter from Sydney, the principal town of Austral-
asia, edited by R. Gouge, 3s . 8vo, 1829
626 Tench (W.) Narrative of the Expedition to Botany Bay, sewed,
2s 6d . . 8vo,1789
627 Tench ( W.) Account of the Settlement at Port Jackson, boards,
4s 6d . . 4to, 1793
628 Torrens (R.) Colonization of South Australia, 3s 8vo, 1835
629 Van Diemen's Land, Copies of the Laws and Ordinances of,
(Parliamentary Papers) 2s 6d fol. 1831
630 Van Diemen's Land Almanack for 1831, 2s
8vo, Hobart Town, 1836
631 Wilson (Capt. James) Missionary Voyage to the Southern Pa-
cific Ocean, maps and plates, boards, 5s 4to, 1799
632 Wilson ( — ) Narrative of four years' residence at Tongataboo,
4s 6d . . 8vo, 1810
633 Information relative to New Zealand, Is 6d 8vo, 1839
£T. Roto,
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels. 33
VOYAGES AND TRAVELS IN SEARCH OF A NORTH-WEST
AND NORTHEAST PASSAGE.
634 Allison (T.) Account of a Voyage from Archangel in 1697, of
the Ship wintering near the Cape, map, calf, 3s 6d 8vo, 1699
6 34* Back, Narrative of the Arctic Land Expedition to the mouth of
the great Fish River, plates and maps, bds. 7s 6d 8vo, 1836
635 Barrington *(D.) Tracts on the probability of reaching the N.
Pole, 3s 6d . 4to, 1775
636 Barrington (D.) The possibility of reaching the north Pole as-
serted, with other papers on a N. W. Passage, by Beaufoy,
map, 3s • . 8vo, 1818
636*Barrington and Beaufoy on a N. West Passage, 1818 — Sabine's
Remarks on Ross's Voyage, 1819 — Ross's Explanation of
Sabine's Remarks, 1819; 1 vol. calf, 5s 6d
637 Crantz, History of Greenland; including an account of the
Mission of the United Brethren in that Country, 2 vol. bds. 6s
♦ 8vo, 1820
638 Drage (— ) Account of Smith's Voyage for the Discovery of a
North- West Passage, plates, 2 vol. 5s 8vo, 1748
639 Egede (H.) Relation angaaende den Groenlandske Missions, 1738
— Groenlands Perlustration eller Naturel-Historie, 1741, many
plates, in 1 vol. 8s . 4to, Kioben.
640 Ellis (H.) Voyage to Hudson's Bay for the Discovery of a
North-West Passage, map and plates, 3s 6d 8vo, 1748
641 Ellis, Voyage de la Baye de Hudson, pour la decouverte du pas-
sage de Nord-Ouest, map and plates, 2s 6d 12mo, Par. 1749
642 Franklin's (Capt.) Narrative of a Journey to the Shores of the
Polar Sea, in the years 1819-22, with Appendix, maps and
plates, some coloured, fine copy, calf gilt extra, marbled leaves,
£1 10s . . 4to, 1823
643 Graah (W. A.) Narrative of an Expedition to the East Coast of
Greenland in search of the lost colonies, map, 4s 6d 8vo, 1837
644 Relation du Groenland, 5s 6d 8vo, Par. 1647
645 Greenland. Neueste beschreibung von alt und Neu Groenlands,
plates, 4s 6d . 4to, Nitrnb. 1679
646 Het gamle Gronlands Nye Perlustration, 5s 8vo, 1729
647 Hearne, Journey from Hudson's Bay to the northern Ocean for
the discovery of a North-West Passage, maps and plates,
bds. 8s . . 4to, 1795
648 Impracticability of a North-West Passage for Ships impartially
considered, Is 6d . 8vo, 1824
649 JefFerys (T.) The great probability of a North-West Passage,
maps, 4s 6d . . 4to, 1768
650 Laing (J.) Voyage to Spitzbergen, Is 6d 12mo, 1818
651 Letter containing Remarks upon De l'lsle's Chart, and Memoirs
relating to the discoveries N. and E. of Kamtschatka, Sec, with
Observations by Dobbs, 2s 6d 8vo, 1754
9, Great Newport Street.] F
34 Voyages and Travels. [HISTORICAL
652 Mackenzie (A.) Voyages from Montreal through the continent
of North America to the frozen and pacific Oceans, maps,
bds. 9s . 4to, 1801
653 Marteus (F.) Spitzbergische oder Groenlandische Reise Bes-
chreibuug, plates, 2s 6d 4to, Hamb. 1675
654 Memoirs et Observations Geographiques et critiques sur la situ-
ation des pays septentrionaux de I'Asie et de l'Amerique,
maps, 4s 6d 4to, Laus. 1765
655 Mesange (P. de) Vie, avantures, et le Voyage de Greenland,
2 vol. in 1, plates, 5s 6d 12mo, Amst. 1720
656 Middleton (Capt. G.) Forgery Detected— Reply to Mr. Dobbs's
Answer to Forgery Detected, 2s 8vo, 1745
657 Dobbs, Reply to Capt. Middleton's Answer, 2s 8vo, 1745
658 Middleton (C.) Vindication of his conduct in his Voyage for
discovering a North- West Passage, 1743 — Dobbs's Remarks
upon Middleton's Defence, 1744— Middleton's Reply to
Dobbs, 1744; 3 vol. calf, 5s 6d 8vo
659 Muller, Voyages et decouvertes faites par les Russes le long des
cdtesjde la Mer Glaciale et sur l'Ocean oriental, 2 vol. calf, 4s
12mo, 1766
660 De Noordsche Waireld, Reysen van Martiniere door Noorwee-
gen, Lapland, Boranday, Siberien Samojessie, Greenland, &c.
en Martens nae Spitzbergen, plates, 6s 4to
661 North-West Passage. Summary Observations and Facts,
collected from Russian and other Navigators, to shew the
practicability and good prospect of success in enterprises to
discover a Northern Passage, 2s 4to, 1776
662 North Georgia Gazette and Winter Chronicle, 3s 6d 4to, 1S21
663 O'Reilly (B.) Greenland, the adjacent Seas, and the North- West
Passage to the Pacific, illustrated in a Voyage to Davis's
Strait, maps and plates, bds. 6s 4to, 1818
6^4 Outhier (M.) Journal d'un Voyage au Nord, 1736-7, maps and
plates, large paper, calf, gilt leaves. 10s 4to, Paris, 1744
665 Phipps (C. J.) Voyage towards the North Pole, plates, calf, 6s
4to, 1674
666 Proceedings of the Committee of Adventurers for discovering a
N. W. Passage to America, 1749 — State of the Countries
claimed by the Hudson's Bay Company, 1749 -Probability
of a Passage to the Western American Ocean, 5s 6d 8vo
667 Sabine (E ) Remarks on Ross's Voyage to Baffin's Bay, Is
8vo, 1819
668 Ross (J.) Explanation of Captain Sabine's Remarks on the late
Voyage to Baffin's Bay, Is 6d 8vo, 1819
669 Spitsbergen. Histoire du pays nomme Spitsberghe. Latriste
racompte des maux, que noz Pecheurs tout basques que fla-
mens, ont eu a souffrir des Anglois. Et une Protestation
centre les Angloys et annullation de touts leurs frivoles argu-
mens, parquoy ils pensent avoir droict, pour se faire maistre
tout seul, du diet Pays, rare, 15s 4to, Amst. 1613
[T. Rodd,
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in Europe. 35
670 Saner (M.) Account of Billing's Expedition to the Northern
Parts of Russia, large paper, plates, 8s 1802
671 (De Veer). The true Description of Three Voyages so strange
and wonder full that the like hath never been heard of before,
done by the Ships of Holland in the North sides of Norway,
Moscovia, and Tartaria, towards the Kingdoms of Cathaia
and China, with the Discoverie of the Slreights of Weigates,
Nova Zembla, &c, with the cruell beares and other monsters
of the Sea, translated by W. Philip, blacfe UtUt,£2 2s 4to,1609
672 — Another copy, the title wanting, 7s 4to, 1609
673 Voyage of the late King of Sweden, and another of Mathemati-
cians sent by him, in which are discover'd the refraction of the
sun, &c. autograph of Humfrey Wanley, 2s 6d 8vo, 1698
674 Zeno, Co mm en tar ii del Viaggio in Persia di Caterino Zeno, et
dello scuprimento dell' Isole Frislanda, Eslanda, Engroue-
landa, Estotilanda, et Icaria fatto sotto il Polo Artico, da due
fratelli Zeni, 10s 6d . 12mo, Venet. 1558
675 Zorgragers (C. G.) Bloeyende Opkomst der Aloude en Heden-
daagsche Groenlandsche Visschery, plates, 4s 4to^AmsL 1 720
VOYAGES AND TRAVELS IN EUROPE.
676 Allison (T.) Account of a Voyage from Archangel, in the year
1697, 3s 6d . 8vo, 1699
677 Autumn near the Rhine, with a Tour in the Taunus Mountains
in 1820, boards, 3s . 8vo, 1821
678 Baillie (M.) First Impressions on a Tour upon the Continent,
plates, 3s . 8vo, 1819
679 Batthijani (Graaf von Vinvenz) Reize door een Gedeelte van
Hongaryen, Zevenburgen, Moldavien en Buccowina, 2s 6d
8vo, Leeuward. 1813
680 Beaumont (A.) Travels through the Maritime Alps, plates,
10s 6d . fol. 1795
681 Bernard (Hon. R. B.) Tour through parts of France, Switzer-
land, Savoy, Germany, and Belgium, 2s 8vo, 1815
682 Best (H.) Italy as it is, or Narrative of an English family's
residence for four years, 2s 6d 8vo, 1828
683 Biornstahl's Briefe of seinen auslandischen Reisen, 6 vol. 8s
8vo, Leipz. 1780
684 Bisani (A.) Voyage en divers endroites de PEurope, de l'Asie,
&c. calf, marbled leaves, 3s 6d 8vo, Lond. 1782
685 Bourritt, Voyage Pitoresque aux Glacieres de Savoye, Is 6d
12mo, Geneve, 1773
686 Boswell (J.) Account of Corsica, Is 6d 8vo, Glasgow, 1768
687 Boswell (J.) Another copy, calf, port and map, 2s 6d 8vo, 1769
688 Bright's Travels through Lower Hungary, maps and plates,
boards, 7s 6d 4to, Edinb. 1818
9, Great Newport Street.]
SR Veyagssand Travels m Europe, [Historical
(IK'j Brown (E.) Travels in Hungary, Servia, (*c. with observations
on the Mines, plates, 2s 6d . 4to, 1673
690 Brown (E.) Travels in Hungarie, Servia. Bulgaria, &c. witli
observations on the Mines and account of the Antiquities, fitc.
plates, LAKGE PAPER, Ills . fnl 1683
691 Brydone (P.) Tour through Sicily and Malta, 2 vol. calf, 3s
8vo, 1774
692 De Bucli, Voyage, en Norvege. et Laponie, precede d'une intro-
duction pot de Humboldt, 2 vol. 4s 6d 8vo. Par. 1816
693 Burgia, Observations d'un Voyageur snr la Rusaie la Finkiude,
la Livonie, 1787, &c— De Londres et de ses environs, 1788 ;
t vol. 3s . . 8vo
694 Burnaby (A.) Journal of a Tour to Corsica in 1766, with
original Letters of Pascal Paoli, 2s 4to, 1804
695 Burnet (B.) Letters on his Travels through Switzerland, Italy,
and Germany. 2s . . 8vo, 1724
696 Burnet (Bp.) Travels through France, Italy, Germany, and
Switzerland, calf, neal.2s 6d 12iuo, 1750
697 Burnet, Reflexions on Burnet's Travels, Is 6d 12mo, 1688
698 Chancel (A. D.) New Journey over Europe, neat, 3s 6d 8vo,1714
699 Chytrseus (N.) Variorum in Europa I tine rum delicate : seu es
vnriis Manuscriptis selectiora tantum Inscriptionum maximc
recentium Monumenta, 5s . 8vo, 1806
700 Cogan (T.) Journey from Utrecht to Francfort by the Borders
of the Rhine, plates, 2 vol. 4s 6d 8vo, 1794
701 Conde (le Prince de) Voyage en Italie, Is 6d Paris, 1666
702 Condamine's Observations made in a Tour to Italy, 2s 1 2mo. 1768
703 Coudumine, Journal of a Tour in Italy.. 1763— Narrative of the
preservation of three Women who were buried 37 days under
the ruins of a stable, 1765 ; one vol. 4s I2mo
704 Croker (R.) Travels through several proviuces of Spain aud
Portugal, 2s 6d . . 8vo, 1799
705 Crowne (A.) A true Relation of all the Remarkable Places and
Passages observed in the Travels of Thomas Howard, E. of
Arundel, 5s 4to, 1637
706 Cose(W.) Account of Prisons and Hospitals in Russia, Swe-
den, and Denmark, sewed, 2s 8vo, 1781
707 Debes Description of the Islands and Inhabitants of Focroe,
maps, 2s 6d . . 12mo. 1676
708 De Russet (C. P.) Proc' edings in Parga and the Ionian Islands,
24 8vo, 1819
709 Drydeu (J. Junior) Voyage to Sicily aud Malta, in the year*
1700 and 1701, 2s . . 8vo, 1776
710 Dryden (J.) Voyage to Sicily and Malta, 1700-1— W. l'or-
dyce's Memoirs concerning Here ulane urn, 1750 — Description
of Corsica, map, 1 739 ; 1 vol. 4s 6d 8vo
711 Ducas (Theodore) Travels in various countries in Europe al
the revival of Letlers and Art. edited by O. Mills, 2 vol. ids. 5s
8vo, 1822
[T. Rodd,
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in Europe. 37
712 Da Mont, Voyages en France, Italie, Allemagne, a Malthe, et
en*Turquie, plates, 4 vol. 4s 6d l2mo, Haye, 1699
713 Du Paty, Travels through Italy, calf, 2s 6d 8vo, 1788
714 Eustace (J. C.) Letters from Paris, 2s 8vo, 1814
715 Gait (J.) Letters from the Levant, State of Society in Greece,
&c. 2s 6d . . . 8vo, 1813
716 Gley, Voyage en Allemagne eten Pologne, Is 6d 8vo, 1816
717 Grasseri (J. J.) Itinerarium ex inclyta ad Moen. Franco-fordia
per celebriores Helvetian, et regni Arelatenses arbes, in
ltaliam, 3s . . 8vo, Basil. 1624
718 Guys, Voyage Litteraire de la Grece, ou Lettres sor la Grecs
anciens et moderns, avec un parallele de leurs moeurs, plates,
4 vol. calf, 10s . 8vo, Par. 1783
719 Hegeniti Itinerarium Frisio Hollandicum, et Abr. Ortelii Itinera-
rium Gallo Brabanticum, 3s 12mo, Elz. 1630
720 Henderson (E.) Iceland; its natural Phenomena, History, Anti-
quities, &c. plates, bds. 7s 6d 8vo, Edin. 1819
721 Hodgskin (T.) Travels in the north of Germany, describing the
present state of the social and political institutions, 2 vol. 4s 6d
8vo, 1820
722 Hughes 4 (J.) Itinerary of Provence and the Rhone, with etchings
by the author, 2s 6d . . 8vo, 1822
723 Ireland (Thos. J.) Extracts from a Journal during a Tour in
Italy, plates, bds. 14s 8vo, privately printed, 1836
724 Keate (G.) Account of Geneva, 2s 8vo, 1761
725 Kendrick (T. C.) The Ionian Islands, Manners and Customs,
Sketches of the Ancient History, with anecdotes of the Sep-
tinsulars, 2s 6d . • 8vo, 1822
726 Keyszlers (J. G.) Neueste Reisen durch Deutschland, Bohmen,
Ungarn, &c. 2 vol. plates, calf, 10s 4to, Hannov. 1751
727 Letters from an Officer of the Guards, containing some Account
of France and Italy, 2s . 8vo, 1778
728 Lister (M.) Journey to Paris, plates, 2s - 8vo, 1699
729 Mackenzie (Sir G. S.) Travels in the island of Island, plates,
boards, 10s . . 4to, 1811
730 Malta. Reflexions sur la derniere emeute de Malthe, Is 6d
8vo, 1776
731 Malta. Policy and Interest of Great Britain with respect to
Malta, the title wanting, Is . 8vo
732 Matthews (H.) Diary of an Invalid, boards, 3s 6d 8vo, 1820
733 Matthisson, Letters from various parts of the continent between
1785 and 1794, by Miss Plumptre, 2s 6d 8vo, 1799
734 Miller (Mrs.) Letters from Italy, 3 vol. 4s 6d 8vo, 1776
735 Montfaucon (Father) Travels from Paris to Italy, plates, 2s 6d
8vo, 1712
736 Monsanto, Tour from England through part of France, Flanders,
Brabant, and Holland, Is 6d . 8vo, 1752
737 Montaigne (M. de) Voyage en Italie en 1580, 1581, 3 vol.
calf 4s 6d . 12mo, Rome, 1775
9, Great Newport Street.]
38 Voyages ami Traeeh in Europe. £ HISTORICAL
738 Napier (C. J.) Memoir on the Roads of Celalouia, platen, 3s
8to, 1825
739 Neumaicr von Ranistla, Rciae durcl] WeUchland mill Hl.sjm.
nien, 5b . . 4to, Lrtp. LeSS
740 Nikoiai Wichlige Entder.kungcn auf einer gclehrten Reise (lurch
Deutscbland, 4s fid . 8vo, Be&enfi. 1788
741 New Journey to France, In 6d . 8vo, 1715
742 Nortball (J.) Travels through Italy, 2s 8vo, 1766
743 Nortldeigh (J.) Topographical Descriptions, and Observations
made io two several \ ovagea through most parts of Europe.
L2s 6d .' . 8vo, 1702
744 Overbiiry (Sir T.) Observations upon the United Provinces and
ou the Stute of France, Is fid . 12mo, 1651
745 Patio, Qoatre Relation! Hisiori<pies(deses Voyages) plaits, Is fid
12m©, 1673
746 Patin (C.) Voyages en Allcmaguc, Angleterre, Hollande, &c.
platen, 'is . . ISido* Amtt. 1695
747 Patin (C.) Travels through Germany. Bohemia, Swisserland,
Holland. Stcyfafer, »tat,ii 6d 12mo, 1696
748 Pom <W) Travails in Holland and Germany, 1677, 1694-
Jacob's Discourse concerning Faith and Fervency in Prayer.
1713, 4s 6d . 12mo
749 Pennington ('!',) Continental Excursions, or Tours into France,
Switzerland, and Germany, in 1782, 1787, and 1789, with a
description of Paris, 2 vol. bds. 3s fid 1809
750 Potter (H.) Lotgevallen op eene reis van Frieslond, door West-
falen en het Waldeksche naar Hauau, 2s 6d 8vo, 1816
761 Poucimwiu.TC, Voyage dans la Orece, avec des consider:-. I inns
sur l'archeologie. numismatic] tie lea mceurs, &c. map and
phtiM, 5 vol. half calf, ntal, £1 4s 8vo, Par. 1820
752 Pratt (— ) Gleanings through Wales. Holland, and Westphalia.
3 vol. calf extra, marbled haves, 18s 8vo, 1797
753 Randolph, I'res.nt State of the Morea. Is 6d 4to, 1686
754 Randolph (B.) Present slide of the islands in I lit Archipelago, 2s
4to, 1687
755 Ray (J.) Observations, Topographical, Moral, and Physiologi-
cal, made in a journey through the low countries of Germany,
Italy, and France, 2s fid . 8vo, 1(573
756 Ray's (John) Travels through the Low-Countries, Germany,
Italy, and France, with Account of V. Willugliby's Travels,
Catalugue of Plants, &c. 2 vul.ftne copy, calf, marbled leaves,
16s . . . 8vo, 1738
757 Relation de differentes Voyages dans les Alpes du Faucigny, 2s
12mo, Maestricht, 1776
758 Remarks in the Grand Tour of France and Italy, 2s 6d
ismo, ten
759 Rose ( VV. S.) Letters from tbeNortb of Italy, 2 vol. 3s 8vo, 1819
760 Rutilii Niuuiliani Galli Iiinerarium, 4s 12mo, Atnst. 1687
\T-
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in Europe. 39
761 Rutland (Duke of) Journal of a trip to Paris, 6s
4to, privately printed, 1814
762 Rutland (Duke of) Journal of a short trip to Paris in 1815, 5s
4to, privately printed, 1815
763 Scheuzeri (J. J.) Itinera Alpina tria; in quibus Animalia,
Plantae, Mineralia, Fossilae, &c. iconibus illustrate, plates, 5s
4to, Lond. 1708
764 Secundus (J.) Itineraria Tria, Belgicum, Gallicum et Hispani-
cum, a D. Heinsio, 2s 6d . 8vo, Leyde, 1598
765 Several Years Travel through Portugal, Spain, Italy, Germany,
&c. 2s 6d . . 8vo, 1702
766 Sherlock (M.) Lettres d'un Voyageur Anglois, 2s
8vo, Geneve, 1779
767 Sherlock (M.) Lettres d'un Voyageur Anglois, original red
morocco binding, gilt leaves, 6s Svo, privately printed, 1779
768 Sherlock (M.) Lettres d'un Voyageur Anglois, 2s fol. Neuch. 1781
769 Sherlock, Nouvelles Letters d'un Voyageur Anglois, Is 6d
8vo, 1780
770 Sherlock (M.) New Letters from an English Traveller, 2s 6d
8vo, 1781
771 Simond (L.) Journal of a Tour and residence in Switzerland,
2 vol. 4s . 8vo, 1823
772 Sketches and Observations on a Tour through various parts of
Europe, 1792-94, 2s 6d 8vo, 1797
773 Smollett (T.) Travels through France and Italy, 2 vol. 4s
8vo, 1766
774 Smyth (W. H.) Memoir of Sicily and its Islands, boards, 7s 6d
4to, 1724
775 Southey (R.) Letters written during a residence in Spain and
Portugal, 5s 6d . 8vo, Bristol, 1799
776 Stanvan (T.) Account of Switzerland, 2s 8vo, 1714
777 Sulzer (J. G.) Journal d'un Voyage en 1775-6 dans les Pays
Meridionaux de 1' Europe, boards, 3s 8vo, Haye, 1781
778 Sutherland (Captain D.) Tour up the Straits from Gibraltar to
Constantinople, red morocco, gilt leaves, 5s 6d 8vo, 1790
779 Swinburne (H.) Picturesque Tour through Spain, plates,
£llls6d . oblong fol. 1806
780 Thicknesse (P.) Observations on the Customs and Manners of
the French Nation, sewed, 2s 8vo, 1766
781 Thiebaut (A.) Voyage a l'Isle des Peupliers, plates, Is 6d
12mo, Paris, 1799
782 Thomson (T.) Travels in Sweden, plates, boards, 6s 4to, 1813
783 Townson (R.) Travels in Hungary, with account of Vienna,
ptates, calf, 9s . 4to, 1797
784 Trederi (J.) Feriae Viadrinae sive commentatio Itinerario de
aditu per Venetos et Picentes Romano et moderno ejusdem
urbis ambituad Historias comparata, 4s 8vo, Stetin. 1652
785 Turner's (W.) Journal of the Tour in the Levant, map and
plates, 3 vol. boards, 9s . 8*o, 1820
9, Great Neivport Street]
40 Voyages and Travels in Turkey, S;c. [HISTORICAL
786 Voyage en Islande fait par ordre de S. M. Danoise, 5 torn, avec
atlas, 10s . 8vo, Parts, 1802
787 Waddinrton (G.) Visit to Greece in 1823-4, boards, 2s 6d
8vo, 1825
788 Walker (A.) Ideas suggested on the Spot in a late excursion
through Flanders,Germany,France, and Italy, 2s 6d 8vo,1790
789 Watkins (J.) Travels through Switzerland, Italy, &c. 2 vol.
calf, neat, 5s . 8vo, 1792
790 Watts ( W.) Description of a Journey through part of French
Flanders, &c. 2s Svo, privately printed, 1816
791 Weston (S.) Two Sketches of France, Belgium, and Spa, neat,
3s . . 8vo, 1817
792 Weston (S.) A. IVimester in France and Switzerland, or Three
Months' Journey, plates, 3s 8vo, 1821
793 Wheeler's Journey into Greece, plates of Antiquites and
Coins, £4 4s . fol. 1682
%* This copy belonged to Heneage Finch, Earl of Winchelsea, who has made
valuable additions : the following note appears in his handwriting :
" Heneage Finch, May 2d, 1702. Having several Medals (and many of them
very rare ones) in my possession, which relate to places mentioned in this
book, but neither engraved nor describ'd in it, I have design'd them in
the margin, with short notes of explanation." " I have chosen (that I
might give the truer idea of my Medals) to draw them in their true pro-
portion. 1 have sett a mark to each, expressing their metal, as AR for
silver, JE for brasse and copper, and have also marked how many grains
each silver medal weighs.'*
794 Wraxall (N.) Tour through some of the Northern parts of
Europe, calf, 4s . 8vo, 1776
TRAVELS IN TURKEY AND THE LEVANT, SYRIA, AND
PALESTINE ; AND HISTORY OF THE TURKISH EMPIRE.
795 Abrege des Voyages faits par les plus celebres Voyageurs dans
la Syrie, la Palestine, l'Arabie, la Perse, &c. plates, 2 voL
4s 6d . 8vo, Paris, 1 800
796 Acoltis Aretini (B. de) de Bello contra Barbaros a Christianis
gesto, 3s . 12mo, Basil. 1544
797 Adamannus, Scoto-Hibernus, Liber desitu terrse sanctae, 5s
4to, Ingols. 1619
798 Adrichomii Theatrum Terrae Sanctae et Biblicarum Historiarum,
maps, 8s . fol. Colon. 1613
799 Adrichom, Jerusalem sicut Christi tempore floruit, et suburb.
insjgrjiorumq ; Hist, ejus brevis descriptio, 2s 6d 8vo, 1684
800 Ancillon, Histoire de la vie de Soliman, second Empereur des
Turcs, 2s 6d . 12mo, Rott. 1706
801 Aranda (Antonio de) Verdedera informacio de la tierra sancta,
segun la disposicion en que en el ano de 1530, el auctor la
veo y passeo, gothic letter, rare, £2 10s Toledo, 1558
802 Batilly, Traicte de l'Origine des Anciens Assasins, porte-
couteaux, 3s 6d . Svo, Lyon, 1603
[T. Rodd,
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in Turkey, $c. 41
803 Blunt (H.) Voyage into the Levant, 4s 6d 4to, 1636
804 Blunt (H.) Voyage into the Levant, half bd. 4s 4to, 1638
805 Blast (Sir H.) Voyage into the Levant, by the way of Venice,
Dahnatia, Sclavonia, Bosna, Hungary, Macedonia, Thessaly,
Thrace, Rhodes, and Egypt, 2s 6d 12mo, 1664
806 Bosset (G. P. de) Parga and the Ionian Islands, 3s 8vo, 1821
807 Bremond, Viaggie fatti nelT Egitto, e d'Oriente, 5s 4to, Rom. 1 679
808 Brocquiere's Travels to Palestine, and return overland to
France, in the years 1432 and 1433, trans, by Johnes,
boards, 7s 6d . 8vo, 1807
809 Brown (E.) Travels and Adventures in the Levant, Egypt, and
Abyssinia, neat, 5b . 8vo, 1739
810 Brown (E.) Travels in France and Italy, Voyage to the Island
of Malta, Egypt, &c. 2 vol. 3s 6d 12mo, 1753
81 1 Buda : Description of the Conquest of the City of Buda, the
capital of Hungary, from the Turks, plates, 2s 4to, 1686
812 Burbury (J.) Relation of Lord Howard's Journey to Vienna and
Constantinople, 3s 6d . 12mo, 1671
813 Busbequii de Legationis Turc Epistolse, plates by Sadeler,
Is 6d . 12mo, Mon. 1620
814 Busbequius(A. G.) Omnia quae extant, red morocco, gilt leaves,
7s . . 12mo, Elzevier, 1633
815 Busbequii, Quae extant omnia ; quibus accessit epitome de rebus
Turcarum, Is . 12mo, 1660
816 Busbequius (A. G.) Omnia quae extant Legationis Turcica?, &c.
3s . . 8vo, Basil. 1740
817 Cadalvene et Breuvery, TEgypte etla Turquie de 1829 a 1836,
2 vol. sewed, 6s • 8vo, Par. 1836
818 De captivis Christians (a very curious relation of the treatment
of Christian slaves by the Turks), 3s 6d 4to, (JLiptz.') 1498
819 Cervarius (L.) de Turcarum origine moribus, et rebus gestis
Commentarius, calf, 12s 4to, Florent. 1590
820 Clayton (Bp. of Clogher) Journal from Grand Cairo to Mount
Sinai, ana back again, trans, from a manuscript written by
the Prefetto of Egypt, with Remarks on the Origin of Hiero-
glyphics, plates, 2s 6d . 8vo, 1753
821 Journal from Grand Cairo to Mount Sinai, trans, from a Ma-
nuscript written by the Prefetto of Egypt, with Remarks
on the Origin of Hieroglyphics and Heathen Mythology, by
Clayton, Bishop of Clogher, 3s 6d 4to, 1753
822 Clenardus (Nic.) Peregrinationum ac de rebus Machometicis,
5s . 12mo, Lovan. 1551
823 Comidas, Descrizione Topografica dello stato presente di Co-
stantinopoli, plates, 5s 4to, Bassano, 1794
824 Constantini Porph. de Thematibus sire de Agminibus militari-
bus perimperium Orientale distributis, a B. Vulcanii, 2s
8vo, Lugd. 1588
825 Contareni (J. P.) Historia de Bello nupef Venetis a Selimo II,
Turcarum imp. illato, Lat. a Stupano, 3s 6d 4to, Basil. 1573
9, Great Newport Street.] G
Vagagta and ThtveU m Timlwy, $c [Historical
Coronelli (P. M.) Memoires HisWiques et Geograpliiqiies du
Royanme de It* Moree, Negropont. et des Places Maritime
jusques * Tncssalonique jgfofes, 3s 12.no. ^JflMf. 1686
Crusius (M.) Turco Gra?ciaj, quibus Griecoruni status sub Im-
perioTurcico. scarce, 16a fol. fl««7. 1578
rwulnitini (Joan.) tie Turcorura origine, religione ac imma-
nissima eorum in ChristianoB tyrannide, 3s 8uo, 1541
Cuspinianus, De Tiirciirnm origine, rdigione ac ioiiuauissima
eoruiii In ClirisiiiuiuB Ivrannule— Muiitalbamis de Turcarum
moi il.us 2s 6d . 12iiio, L. B. 1654
Diuiwuii, Guerre des Russes contra les Tiircs. 2s 3vo, Lou. 1 774
Dandini (.1.) Voyage a Mont Liban, mat, 5s 6d 12oio, 1685
Dandini (J.) Voyage to Mount Libanus, trans, by W. C, 4b
8vo, 1698
Dandini. Voyage to Mount Libanus, 2s Hvo, 1698
Description du Pacbalilide Bagdad, suived'une notice Histurique
sur les Wabhbis, mat, 3s 8vo, Par. 1809
Dialogus inter discipulum et magistrum deplorant ruiuam pupul
chriatiani et vicloriaiu Tuurcorutn, warmer/, 2s 6d
fol. Malting*, 1494
Donado (G. B.) Viaggi a Constantinopoli, 2 toin. vellum, 9m
12mo, Venez. 168
Du Mont, Nouveau Voyage du Lerant, plates, 3s
12mo. Hayt, 169.
E pistol us Magni Turclii, early edition, sured, 10s
4to, Anita. Math, Goes, no dale
Essais de Geographic de Politique el d'Histoire sur les posses-
sions des Turcs en Europe, 3s 8vo, Neuck. 1785
Faber (Joanne) Oratio de origine, pofentia, at tyrannide Tliurco-
rum. ad ser. ft potent. Henricum Anglia? et Franciie regem.
dicta Londini, rare, 10s small 8vo. 1523
Febure{M.) Theatre de la Turquie, ou sour representees les
clioses les plus remarquahles loucliant les Turcs, et de trei/e
autras sortes de nations qui habitent dans I empire Ottoman,
calf, 9s . - 4to, Par. 1682
Ferrierea-Sanveborul' (Comte de) Memoires deses Voyages fait*
en Turquie, en Perse et en Arabie, 2 vol. 4s 6d 8vo, it. 1790
Puller. Pisgali Siglit of Palestine, maps, good clean copy, 18s
fol. 1650
Fureri Itinerarium ■'Egypti, Arabia?, Pala?stina>, Syria?, &c. port.
plates, 3s 6d . 4to, Nor. 1621
G. (J.)Jounieyfrom Aleppo to Damascus, map,2afid 8vo, 1736
Georgievicz, Speccliio delia Peri grin atione delli piu nutabili
luoghi del la terra sail la, et delle. proci-ssioni et cerimonii die
nelia citta di Hierusalem si poglioni celebrare, 3s 6d
8vo, Roma, 1554
Georgieviz (Bartli.) de Turcarum moribus epitome, woodcuts,
neat,4s 6d . . 12mo, 1598
[j. Uodo,
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in Turkey, $c. 43
848 Giovio (P.) et A. Gambini Commentarii delle Cose de Turchi,
con gliFatti et la Vita di Scanderbeg, 3s 8vo, Vineg. Aldo, 1541
849 Griffith (J.) Travels in Europe, Asia Minor, and Arabia, fine
PAPER, bds. 1806— Biographical Sketch of J. Griffith, Esq.
privately printed, 1822, 10s 6d 4to
850 Gylliw (r.) Antiquities of Constantinople: Public buildings,
statuary ; sculpture, architecture, and other curiosities, trans.
by J. Ball, plates, 3s . 8vo, 1729
851 Hacket (T.) Most rare and strange Discourses of Amurathe the
Turkish Emperor that now is : of his personne and how hee
is governed : with the warres between him and the Persians,
and also of the Tartars and Muscovites, black Utter, 7s
4to, London, T. HaclceU (1583)
852 Hammer (J. von) die geschichto der Assassinen, aus morgen-
landischen Quellen, 3s 6d . 8vo, Stuttg. 1818
853 Hasselquist, Voyages dans le Levant, neat, 2s 6d 12mo, 1769
854 Historia Belli prassentis inter Russos et Turcos, in modern
Greek, 6 vol. sewed, 6s 12mo, Venet 1770
855 The History of the Turkish War with the Germans and Poles,
by J. S., Is 6d . 12mo, 1684
856 History of the Revolt of Ali Bey against the Ottoman Porte, 3s
8vo, 1784
857 Holloway (W.) Relation of the late Siedge and taking of Baby-
lon by the Turke, 2s 6d . 4to, 1639
858 Hutten (Ul. de) ad principes Germanise, ut bellum Turcis inve-
hant. Exhortatio, 2s 6a 4to, Aug, 1518
859 Itinerarium Benjamin Tudelensis, Ant. 1575 — Itinerarium per
nonnullas Galliae Belgicse partes Abra. Ortelli et Joannis
Viviani, t'6. 1584 — Petri Divai de Galliae Belgica? Antiquita-
tibu8,ib. 1584 — H. Nuenaride Gallia Belgica Com mentarioius,
ib. 1584 ; 1 vol. £\ 4s 8vo
* # * The copy of Ortelius was a present from the author, as appears from his
autograph on the title, to Camden*
860 Journal d'un Voyage dans la Turquie, d'Asie et la Perse, fait a
1807-1808 (par la Legation Imperiale) avecune Vocab. Per-
sico et Turco, 3s . 8vo, Paris, 1809
861 Knolles (R.) The Generall Historic of the Turkes ; with all the
notable expeditions of the Christian Princes against them,
portraits, 5s 6d . fol. 1603
862 Knolles's Turkish History, by Rycaut, best edition, 3 vol. calf,
£3 5s . . fol. 1687-1700
863 Lavender (T.) The Travels of foure Englishmen and a Preacher
into Africa, Asia, Troy, Bythinia, Thracia, and to the Black
Sea, and into Syria, Judea, Palestine, &c. began in the yeare
1600, and by some of them finished 1611, black Utter, beau-
tiful large clean copy, in the original vellum wrapper (one-
leaf slightly injured) , £2 2s 4to, 1612
864 Legrenzi (A.) II Pelegrino nell' Asia, 6s 12mo, Ven. 1705
9, Great Newport Street]
46 Voyages and Travels it Turkey, ^r. [Historical
910 Sansovino (F.) Histori* universale, deli' origine et imperio tie
Turchi, 3a 6d . 4to, f'enet. 1564
911 Sansovino, 01* Annali Turcheschi, Vemt. 157.1— Hisloria di
Zigbet ispugnata da Suliman, Re de' Turchi 1'anno 1566, li-
1570, 5a . . 4lo
912 Historia del magnanimo et valoroso Signor Georgio Castrioto
detto Scanderbego, 3b 6d 8vo, Vtmt, 1554
913 Bunardo Gesti fatti contra Turchi dal Sign. D. Giorgio Cas-
triotto delta Si-underling, fi-ne portrait cut *» wood, 5a 6d
4to, Vinegia, 1584
914 Papadopulo-Vreto (Andrea) Istoria. di Geo. Castriolto (Scander-
bcg), 2 vol. 3* 6d 12nio, Napoli, 1820
915 Seetzen, Account of tlie countries adjoining the Lake of Tiberias,
the Jordan, and the. Dead Scu, 7s 4to. 1810
916 Sevin, Lettres sur Constantinople suivies de plusiers Lettres de
M. Personnel, co n tenant ues details curieux our l'Empire
Ottoman, 3s . 8ro, Paris, 1802
917 Shaw (T.) Travels in Barbary and the Levant, plaits, calf, £1 Is
4lo, 1757
918 Smith iT.) de Moribus ac Institutis Turcarum— Septem Asife
Ecclesiarum notitiam, 3s 12mo, Oxon. 1672
919 De Stoeliove, Voyage du Levant, rare, 8s 12mo, lirux. 1662
920 Taflerner (P.) Caesarea Legatio quam mandante Aug. Rom.
Iraperator Leopoldo I ad Portam Ottomauicam suscepit, per-
fecitq: do minus Walterus S. tt. I. Conies de Leslie, rare
whole-length portrait of the Earl of Leslie, £1 Is
12mo, (»»-1668
921 Tafferuer, another edition, portrait, 10s 6d 12<no, ib. 1672
V Waiter Earl of LeiLej, of the Scolu«!i Huuse of Lesley, created a Count of
the f Ionian Empire lij tin- Emperor Leopold.
922 Tavernier (J. B.) Relation de l'lnterieur de Serrail du Grand
Seigneur, neat, 5s 4to, 1676
923 Tlieveuot, Relation d'un Voyage fait du Levant, calf. giUUavei,
8s . 4to, Ruuen, 1665
924 Thompson (C.) Travels through Turkey, the Holy Land, Egypt,
&c. plates, 2 vol. sewed, 4s 12nio, 1767
925 Timberlake's Travailes of two English Pilgrim en, what straunge
accidents befel them in their journey towards Jerusalem, Gaza,
Grand Cairo, Alexandria, and other places, red morocco, fine
copy, rare, £2 . 4to, 1611
926 Travels through Egypt, Turkey, Syria, and the Holy Land, by
an English Merchant, 2s 6d 12mo, 1758
927 Travestin ( — ) Account of the Proceedings against the Turks.
Siege of Newheusel, &c. large plan, 2s 4to, 1685
928 Tractalus de ritu et moribus Turcorum, 5s 6d
4to, without place or date (eiroa 1480)
929 Libellus du ritu et moribus Turcorum aute LXX aiiuos aeditiis,
3s , 12mo, Norinib. 1530
[T. Rodu,
.ITF-tUTl'llE.] Voyages awl Travels in Turkey, %c.
45
! Ferry (C.) A View of the Levant, particularly of Constanti-
nople, Syria. Egypt, and Greece, plates of Temples, idols.
Mummies, Hieroglyphics, Sec. calf, 10s fol. 1743
I S. Pierre (Paget de) Hifctoire dea Druses peuple du Liban
forinii par unt Colonic de Francois, 3a 12mo, 1763
I Pococke (H.) Description of the East, plaits of Fiew.t, Build-
ings, Antiquities , Natural History , Sfe. 2 vol. £3 fol. 1743
i91 Polonift' Regis Responsio ad Literas Turcarum imperatoris et
Litera ad magnum Vesirum, la 6d 4to, 1624
! Postellus, De Universitate, scd ante oinneis alias orljis parteis
Terra Sancta, lioc est, ampbsstino compeudio describitur.
tieal, 9b . . 4to, 1563
i93 Porter (~) Observations on tlie Religion, Law, Government,
.mil Miiimcrs of the Turks, 2 vol. 3s 12mo, 1768
194 Pruche (S.) Le Pliilhellene recuril de Poesies politique* ct bis-
toriques, 2s . Svo, 1826
195 Radzivili f Principis Nic. Christ.) Jerosolymitana Peregrinatio,
7s 6d . fol. Antverp. 1614
196 Raodolph (B.) The present State of the Islands in the Archi-
pelago. Sea of Coostantinople, and Gulpli of Smyrna, with
the Islands of Candia and Rhodes, 2s 4to, Oxf. 1687
HP Randolph (B.) Present State of the Morea and Archipelago,
plates, 2s 6& . . 4to, 1689
t Rennell (Major) Remarks on ihe Topography of ancient Ba-
bylon, Arekmolagia paper, Is fid 4to, 1816
H99 Reriirn gestaruni Turcarum et Sophi Persarnm Imp. de auno
MDXIH breviarum, 2s 4to, Aug. (1513)
900 Riedsel (le bWon) Voyages en Sicile dans la Grande Grece et
au Levant, 3s 6d . Svo, Paris, 1802
901 Robson (C ) News from Aleppo, containing many remarkable
occurrences observed by him in his Journey thither, 7s 6d
4to, 1628
! Rocchetta (A.) Peregrinatione di Terra Santa, plates, 8s
4to, Palermo, 1630
103 Roger, La terrc Sainte, ou description topographique des saints
Licux, 1'Histoire de la vie 1'Eniir Pre hie (I din, Prince des Drus.
plates, a small portion of one leaf in the address wanting,
fis 6d . 4to, Par. 1664
104 La Roque, Voyage dans la Palestine, avec la description
TArabic, par Ismacl Abulfeda, 2s 12mo, ib. 1717
m Roque I M. do la) Voyage dans ia Palestine, Amst. 1718— Voy-
age del'Arabie heureuse, ib, 1716, plates, 2 vol. in 1, 5s 12mo
906 Roque (M. de la) Voyage de Syrie et dn Mont-Liban, plates
2 vol. 3s 6d . . 12mo, Par. 172i
W7 Russell (Lord) Establishment of the Turks in Europe, 3s8vo,lfc"
908 Sagredo (J.) Memorias Historicas de los Monurcos Othomanos
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909 Kagrado (G.) Memoria Islorichc de Monurchi Ottomani, 4s 6d
4tu, f\\Kl,V#!8
', Great Newport Street, J
Vogagaaad IVmehin .u,a, $c. [Historical
ARABIA, AND HISTORY OF THE ARABS AN!) SARACK
952 Abul-Plmrajio, Hiatoria COiBpendiosa Djnastiarum, a Poeoek,
5s 6d . 4to, Ox, 1663
963 Freanel, Lettres aur l'Histoire des Arabes avant 1'lslamisme,
3s 6d . . 8»o, Par. 1836
954 M^riLTiiy , Histoire des Arabes sous le gouvernement des Celites,
4 vol. calf. 9s . \2mo,ii>. 1750
965 Maria, I fi^t ( >ii<- de Saladin, sultan d'Egypfe et de Syrie. 2 vol.
catf, 3s 6d . . ib. 1758
955*Niebuhr (C\) Bescbreibung von Arabien, plates, LARGE PAPER,
12s , 4to, Kopen. 1772
956 Rommel, Abull'eda: Arabia; descriptio comnientario perpetua
illustrata, 3s . 4to, Gott. 1802
957 La Roque, Voyage de 1'Arabie Heoreuse par i'Ocean oriental et
par la nier rouge, map and plates, 2s 6d 12mo, Amst. 1716
958 La Roque, Voyage to Arabia the H:ippy by way of (lie Eastern
Ocean and Red Sea ; also account of the Coffee-tree, plaits,
2s 6d . . 12mo, 1726
959 Ockley (S.)Tlie History of the Saracens, 2 vol. half bound, 16s
8vo, Camb. 1757
VOYAGES AND TRAVELS IN ASIA, AND ASIATIC HISTORY.
960 Avril, Travels to discover a new way by Land into China. 2s 6d
LSmo, 1693
961 Baillv, Lettres aur I'Origine des Sciences, et sur celle des
peuples de 1'Asie, 3s 6d 8vo, Lond. 1777
962 Lettres sur 1'Atlantide de Platon et sur l'Ancienne Histoire de
1'Asie, 4s 6d . 8vo, 1779
963 Bell, Travels in divers parts of Asia, 2 vol. calf, 12s
4to, Glasg. 1763
964 Bell (J.) Travels from St. Petersburg to diverse parts of Asia,
map, 2 vol. 3s . 12mo, 1/64
965 Black Sea, Account of the Navigation anil Commerce of the, 2s
8vo, 1805
966 Bourgcs (De) Relation du Voyage de I'Evecjue de Baryte
Vicaire Apostolique du roy. deCochin-China,par laTurqnie,
la Perse, lea Indes, &c. jusqu'au roy de Siam, 4s 6d
8vo, Par. 1666
9C7 Cirbied, Recherches curieuses sur l'Hialoirc Ancienne de 1'Asie.
calf, gilt leaves, 6s . 8vo, ib. 1806
i Ellis (U.) Memoir ofa Map ofthe Countries between the Black
Sea and the Caspian ; with an Account of the Caucasian
Nations, and Vuridmlaiies of their Languages, 7s 4to, 1788
9G9 Forster, Voyage du Bengale a Petersburg, trad, avec des addi-
(ions pur Langle, 3 vol. 4a 6d 8vn, Par. 1802
TERATURT?.] I'ot/tii/rx and Trortis in Ana t $c. 49
I Galani (C.) Historia Armena Ecclesiastica et Politic:., vellum,
7s 6d . Svo, Oohn, lfi8ti
Herbert (Sir T.) Some years Travels into Africa and Asia the
Great, especially Persia and Hindustan, p/nfcs, 5 a b'd fol, 1677
! Klaprotli (J. von) Travels in the Caucasus and Georgia, 6s
4to, 1814
igorio (P.) Abrege Historitpie des Revolutions et du Commerce
de la Tanride, calf, 4s 6d 8vo, Odessa, 1830
974 Laniberti (A.) Relatione delta C hole hide boggi delta Mnifjiellisi.
map, 6» . . 4to, Nap. 1654
975 Liineman (Geo. H.) Description ("nucasi, 5s 4to, Lips. IS03
IMovsis Armeni, Comment, de Origineet Regibns Armeniurum et
Partliorum a H. Brenner, 2s 4to, Stack/mini. 1723
Oleahiub, Voyages en Moscovie, Tartaric, et Perse, et J. A. de
Mandelslo Voyages en Perse et Indes Orientates, trad nits
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in 2. halfrussia, uncut, fine copy, £2 4s fol. Leidt, 1719
Pluto (Fernan Mendez) Peregrinaciones, donde He mui'lios y
estranos cosas que vlo, y oyo en los reynos di la China,
Tartaric, Soniao, Calaminam, Pegna, (vc. fine ropy, 18s
' fol. Mad. 1620
Renin II (J.) on the rate of travelling as performed b\ Camels, Is 6d
" 4to, 1791
Reuilly, Voyage en Crimee et sur les bords de la mer noire,
maps and plates of coins, also neat vignettes engraved by
Dupltsv-Bertttux, 4s 6d . 8vo, Par. 1806
Rooke (H.) Travels 1o the Coast of Arabia Felix, and thence by
the Kr.l-S.-ii 1 Egypt to Europe, Is 6d 8vo, 1783
Baint- Joseph (An toine Baron do) Essai Historique sur le Com-
merce et la Navigation de la Mer noire, 3s 8vo, Par. 1820
— Tableau des provinces sitilees sur la cote de hi Mer Caspieuue
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984 Viaggi fatti da Vinetia, alia Tana, in Persia, in India, et in
TRAVELS IN PERSIA.
AtkiiiKon (J.) Customs and manners of the people of Persia,
trans, from the Persian, 3s 6d , 8td, 1832
Bedik. Nobili Pers-Armeno, Cehil Suhin. seu explicali" Theatri
iiuadrairinli t.'oluimiiiium iii Prrside Orientis, plates, 7s 6d
4to, Vienn. 1673
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bello inter Muratbem IN Turearum et Mehanmtame Persarura
regem : Callimaelii experientis de bello Turcis inferendo, Bar-
bari et Coutarini Iiineraria Persica, &c. 9s fol. Frank. 1601
Clodius (J. C.) Cbronicon Peregrinantis, seu Historia Belli
Persarum cum Aghwanis, e\ codin Tuisico versa, 5s Gd
'ma/ Newport Street.] h
I
Voyages n iuI Tr»r,hn> Persia. [Historical
989 Viago di Arab. Contarini Ambusnator della Signoria di Veuetia
al Signur Uxunrassan Rede Persia, 7s (id 12mo, Fe.net. 1543
990 F.gueroa (0. S.) De Rebus Persarum, 2s 6d 8vo, Ant. 1620
991 Hagemau (G. E.) Monumenti Persepolitaui e Ferdusio Poeta
Persarum Illustrations . 4b», OoU. 1801
992 (litmliti, E.-.sai Hutorique sur la Legislation de la Perce, precede
de la tratluclion complette du Jardin dea Itoses de Sady.
sewed, 4s . . . 8vo, 1789
993 Hanwav (J.) Account of llie British Trade over tlie Caspian
Sea, and Travels through Russia into Persia, 2 vol. calf, 7s fid
4to, 1753
994 Koempferi Ameenitatum Eioticarum, quibus continentur variap
relationes. observationes. et descriptiones rerum Persiearuin
et ulterioris Asia 1 , in peregrinationibus per universem Orien-
tem collectre, plats*, 16s 4tn, Lemgo. 1712
995 Kouli Kan (Thomas) Compleat History of, afterwards Schah
Nadir, Sovereign of Persia, 2s 6d 12mo
9% Histoire de la derniere Revolution de Perse, 2 vol. 2s 6d
12mo, 1728
997 Krusinski's History of the Revolution of Persia, trans, from the
French of Du Cerceau, 2s 6d 8vo, Dublin, 1729
998 Malcolm's History of Persia, 2 vol. half bound calf extra,
£3 4to, 1815
998*Malcolm, another copy. LARGE taper, 2 vol. ids. £Z 3s fol.
999 Memoirs ol Khojeli Abdulkai'i-eem, a Cashmtrian of distinction,
who accompanied Nadir Shah on his return from Hindustan
to Persia, translated from the Persian by Gladwin, 3s 6d
8vo, Calcutta, 1788
1000 Morier (J.) Journey through Persia, Armenia, and Asia Minor
to Constantinople", plates, boards, £2 4to, 1812
1001 Parry ( W.) Travels of Sir Anthony Sherley by Sea and Over-
land to the Persian Empire, imperfect, wanting all after
folio 37, dirty, 3s 6d . 4to. 1601
1002 Persia; Decriplio, woodcuts, Is 12>no, Elzevir, L. B. 1633
1003 Sanson, Voyage, ou relation de 1'etat present du Royaumede
Perse, plates, 2s 6d 12mo, Par. 1695
1004 Sanson, Present State of Persia, plates, Is 6d 12mo, 1695
1005 Schikardi Tarich, h. e. series Regum Persia., 6s 4to, Tub. 1628
1006 Spiln.anf L). lonrney through Uussiainto Peraia,2s6d8w>, 1742
1007 Stocqueler (J. H.] Fifteen Months' Pilgrimage through un-
trodden Tracts of Khuzistan and Persia, 2 vol. boards, 4s 6d
8vo, 1832
1008 Tan coigne, Journey into Persia, map and plate, 2s 6d 8vo, 1820
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in India, #c. 51
VOYAGES AND TRAVELS IN VARIOUS PARTS OF INDIA,
AND HISTORY OF INDIA.
1009 Account of Prince of Wales's Island, or Polo Peenang, in the
East-Indies, 2s . 8vo, 1788
1010 Account of the gallant Defence made at Mangalore against the
French and Nabob Tippo Sultan, plan, 2s 6d 8vo, 1786
1011 D'Alboquerque (A.) Commentaries escrivia ao rey Dom Ma-
nuel, em cujo tempo governou a India, first edition, rare, 18s
fol. Lisb. 1576
1012 Alboquerque (Afonso) Commentarios das Indias Orientes em
tempo do rey Manuel I, 4 torn, boards, 14s 8vo,t&. 1774
1013 Alboquerque (Afonso) Commentarios das Indias Orientes em
tempo do rey Manuel I, 4 vol. bound, 18s 8vo, 1774
1014 Agreement of the Customs of the East-Indians with those of
the Jews and other ancient People, 3s 8vo, 1705
1015 Amboyna. Relation of the Cruelties practised by the Dutch
upon the English at Amboyna, 2s 4to, 1624
1016 Amboyna. Relation of the unjust, cruel, and barbarous Pro-
ceedings against the English at Amboyna, with the Dutch
Declaration and an Answer, 5s 4to, 1624-32
1017 Amboyna. Relation of the Cruel Proceedings against the
English at Amboyna, front. 2s 6d 12mo, 1651
1018 Arthus, Historia Indiae Orientalis, 2s 6d 8vo, Colon. 1608
1019 Baikie (R.) Observations on the Neilgherries, including an
Account of their Topography, Climate, Soil, Productions,
&c. coloured plates, 6s 8vo, Calcutta, 1834
1020 Baldaeus, Beschreibung der beruhmten Ost-Indischen Kusten
Malabar und Coromandel aus auch der insel Zeylon, maps
and plates of views, natural history, fyc, 6s fol. Amst. 1672
1021 Beeckman, Voyage to and froth the Island of Borneo, maps
and cuts, 3s 6d . 8vo, 1718
1022 Memoirs of the Revolution in Bengal in 1757, 1760— Letter
to the Proprietors of East India Stock, 1767, 2s 8vo
1023 Memoirs of the late Revolution in Bengal, 2s 8vo, 1760
1024 Narrative of the Transactions in Bengal during the Soobah-
daries, trans, from the Persian by F. Gladwin, 2s
8vo, Calcutta, 1788
1025 Observations on the Administration of Justice in Bengal, occa-
sioned by some late proceedings at Dacca, 2s n. d.
1026 Bengal. Remarks on the Husbandry and Internal Commerce
of Bengal, 2s . 8vo, 1806
1027 Bengal Almanac, 1837, 2s 8vo, Calcutta
1028 Bernier (F.) Voyages contenant la Description des Etats du
Grand Mogol, 2 vol. in 1, plates, 4s 6d 12mo, Amst. 1699
1029 Bernier, History of the late Revolution in the Empire of the
Great Mogul, 4s 6d . 8vo, 1671
1030 Bernier (F.) History of the late Revolution of the Empire of
the Great Mogol, 4 vol. in 1, 6s 8vo,d671
9, Great Newport Street.]
52 Voyages and Travel* m ImLn,ty:. [Historical
1031 Bombay. An Historical Account of the Settlement of Bombay
by (lie East India Company, nrat, 3s Svo, 1781
1032 Bussche(Capt. L. tie) Letters on Ceylon, particularly relative to
the Kingdom of Kandy, 2s Gd Svo, 1817
1033 Butler, Outlines of the Tocography and Statistics of the southern
districts of Oudh, map, 4s lid Svo, Calcutta, 1 839
1934 Camphell (Donald of Barbreck) Sufferings by Shipwreck, Jour-
ney overland to India, &c. calf, 3s 12mo, 1798
1035 Capper (J.) Observations on the passage to India through
Egypt and the Great Desert, 2s 6d 4to, 1783
1036 Castaneita, Historie of Hie iliscoverie ami conquest of the East
Indias, enterprised by the Portingales, trans, by N. Lich-
field, 1582— Bruton's Vojage to Ben gall a, 1638— An Apo-
logy for the E. I. Company, 1(190 ; and other Tracts relating
to India; 1 vol. £1 10s . 4to
1037 Catron (I" ) Historie Generale de I Empire tlu Mogol, map, 3s
8vo, La Hayt, 1708
1038 Catrou, HSstoire de ^Empire du Mo S ol, calf extra, 6s' 1708
1039 The Ceylon Calendar for 1830, 2s 6d 8vo, Colombo
1040 Voyage to the Island of Ceylon, by a Dutch Gentleman, sewed.
Is fid . . 8vo, 1764
1041 Charpentier, Relation de 1'Etablissement de la Compaguie
Fr.uiroise pour le.s Intles Orientales, 'Is fid 4to, Paris, 1666
1042 Court(H.M.)Exposifionofthe relations of the British Govern-
ment with the Sultan and State of Palembaiig. maps, 2s fid
8vo, 1821
1043 Covert (R.) A true and almost incredible report of an English-
man tbeing cant away in the good Ship called the Aver-
sion, in Caiuhaya, the farthest part of the East Indies)
travelled by land thurow many unknowne Kingdorm-s, and
great Cities. Ike., fine copy, 18s . 4to. 1631
1044 Craul'urd (Q.) Researches on Ancient and Modern India, 2 vol.
hoard*, 5s 8vo, 1817
1045 Crawford, Hiitory of the Indian Archipelago, maps and plates,
3 vol. 6sar4»,lSe . . Svo. 1820
1046 Remarks ou Crawford's Letters from British Settlers in il..-
interior of India, 2s Svo, Calcutta, 1832
1047 Historical and Political view of the Decan, 2s 4io, 1791
1048 Dean (J.) Account of the Ship Susses, wreck'd on the Bassas
de India, Is fid . 8vo, 1740
1049 De L'lele, Relation Historique ■ 1 > j royaurae de Siam, 2s Gd
12mo, Par. 1684
1050 Dellon, Helation d'uc Voyage des Indes Orientales, neal, 5s fid
12mo, ib. 1685
1051 Dellon, Voyage fait aux Indes Orientales, plates, 3a 12mo,1699
1 0'i'J llr.llon, Voyage;., aver, sn relation de I'luquisition de Goa, et
I'Histoire des \Vu:nx qit'adorant lesgentilsdel'Inde, 2 vol, 4s 6d
12mo. 1711
IT.
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in India, Sfc. 53
1053 Description du Pegu et de l'isle de Ceylon, par Hunter, Wolf,
et Eschelskroon, 2s 6d . 8vo, Par. 1793
1054 Dodwell (C.) Narrative of his transactions with the agents of
the E.I. C. respecting a Voyage to Sooloo in 1765, 1766, 2s 6d
8vo, 1773
1055 Dow's History of Hindostan, trans, from the Persian, 3 vol.
calf, 12s . royal 8vo, 1803
1056 Duperron, Tlndeen rapport avec PEurope, 2 vol. half russia,
5s . . 8vo, Par. 1798
1057 Du Qaesne, Voyage aux Indes Orientales, 3 vol. 5s 6d
12mo, Rouen, 1721
1058 Ebn Batutse Descriptio terrae Malabar, Arab ice, interp. et an-
not. instructa per H. Apetz, 2s 6d 4to, Jen. 1819
1059 Elphinstone (M.) History of India, 2 vol. bds.£l 4s 8vo, 1843
1060 Epistolae Indie se, in quibus luculenta extat descriptio rerum
nuper in India gestaram a Theologis Soc. Jesu, 6s
small 8vo, Diling. 1563
1061 Eradut Khan, Memoirs, containing interesting Anecdotes of
the Emperor Aulumgar Aurungzebe, and of his successors
Shaw Aulum and Jehaundar Shaw, trans, by J. Scott, 3s
4to, 1786
1062 Eurenii (Jo.) Atlantica Oriental is, 5s 12mo, BeroL 1764
1063 Farewell (Christ.) an East India Collation, or Discourse of his
Travels in India, rare, £1 5s 12mo, 1633
%* Autographs of White, Kennett, and James Bindley.
1064 Fedrici (Cesare de i)}Viaggio nell' India orientale et oltra l'ln-
dia, bad copy, 2s . 8vo, Ven. 1587
1065 Forster (G.) Sketches of the Mythology and Customs of the
Hindoos, 2s . . 8vo, 1785
1066 Franck, Danischen Missionarien aus Ost-Indien Berichten, 4s 6d
4to, Halle, 1718-19
1067 Froment (D.) Du Commerce des Europeens avec les Indes par
le mer rouge, et par l'Egypte, 3s 8vo, Par. 1799
1068 Fryke and Schewitzer's two Voyages to the E. Indies, 3s
8vo, 1700
1069 Gervaise (N.) Description Historique du royaume de Macacar,
3s . \2mo,Ratisb.l700
1070 Macasar : — Historical Description of the kingdom of Macasar,
in the East Indies, 2s 6d . 8vo, 1701
1071 Glanius (Mr.) A new Voyage to the East Indies ; containing an
account of those rich countries, more especially of Bantam,
port, of the Bantam Ambassador, 3s 12mo, 1682
1072 Goddard (Lieut. Col.) Journal of the march of the Bombay
detachment across the Mahratta country* 1778, map, Is 6d 4to
1073 Graham (A.) Means of ameliorating India, deduced from per-
sonal observations, plates, 2s 12mo, Glasgow, 1835
1074 Haafner, Voyages dans la Peninsule occidentale de l'Inde, et
dans Tile de Ceilan, plates, 3 vol. 7s 6d 8vo, Par* 1811
9, Great 'Newport Street.]
51
Voyages ami Travels in India, $£. [HlSTORl
1075 Haensel (J. G.) Letters on tlie Nicobar Islands, Is 6d 8vo. 1812
1076 Hamilton, New Account of the East Indies, plates, 2 vol. calf,
4s fid . . 8™, Edinb. 1727
1077 Hamilton (A.) New Account of tlie East Indies, maps and
plates, 2 toI. 5s . 8vo, 1744
1078 Hassan AH (Mrs. Mur) Observations on the Mussulmauns or
India, 2 vol. half bound, 7s 6d 8vo, 1832
1079 Hastings (W.) Review of tlie State of Bengal, Is fid 8vo, 1786
1080 Holwell (J. Z.) Narrative of tlie Black Hole at Calcutta, 2s
8vo, 1758
1081 Holwell (J. Z.) Interesting Historical Events relative to the
provinces of Bengal and the Empire of Indostan, part 1; 2s 6d
8ro, 1765
1082 Holwell (J. Z.) India Tracts. Narrative of the black Hole of
Calcutta, &c. plates of Natural History, Hindoo Deities, SfV-
2 vol. calf, 7s . . 8vo, 1774
1083 Howel (T.) Journal of the passage from India through Meso-
potamia, Armenia, and Natolia, map, 2s fid 8vo
1084 Hunter <VV.) Account of the Kingdom of Pegu, Is 6d 12mo,1789
1085 India. Saudtbrieves am Babzt von kunigliclier wurde zu Por-
tugal], von der eroberten Stadt Malacha, 2s 6d 4to, 1513
1086 East Indies. Tlie Civil Wars of Bantam, or a relation of all
the Battels, &0. between that King and his eldest Son, 1683
— Account of the Siege of Bantam and its Surrender to the
Rebels, 1683 — True Account of the Burning and sad Con-
dition of Bantam, 3s 6d . fill. 1682
1087 India. Letter from a Lady at Madras, giving an account of
a Visit to the Minister of the Great Mogul, Is fid 8»o, 1743
1088 Irwin (E.) Enquiry into the feasibility of the supposed expe-
dition of Buonaparte to the East, 2s 8vo, 1798
1089 Ives (E.) Voyage from England to India in 1754, maps and
plates, boards, 5s . . 4to, 1773
1090 Jackson (J.) Voyage from India to England overland, calf, 4b
8vo, 1799
1091 Jacqnemoiit, Correspond a nee avec s;i Faiuille et plusiers de ses
amis pendant son Voyage dans linde (1828-1832) 2 vol, 4s
Svo, Par. 1833
1092 James (Silas) Narrative of a Voyage to Arabia, India, fee,
portrait, 2s . . Svo, 1797
1093 Jenour (Capt M.J Route to India through France, Germany,
&c. Is6d . . . 4to, 1791
1094 Journal d'un Voyage fait aux Indes Orientales, 3 vol. 4s b'd
12mo, Rotten, 1721
1096 Journal of the Boscawen's Voyage to Bombay, Is 6d fol. 1751
1096 Justamond's History of tlie East and West Indies, 4 ml. >;t!f,
8s . . 8vo, 1776
1097 Kiikpatrick, Account of the Kingdom of Nepaul, map and
plates, boards, 10s . . 4to, 1811
(T.l
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in India, fyc. 35
1098 Knox, Historical relation of the Kingdom of Ceylon, plates, 8s
fol. 1681
1099 Knox (R.) Historical relation of the Island of Ceylon, plates,
calf extra, fine copy, 16s . fol. 1681
1100 Lassenii (C.) Commentatio Geographica atque Historica de
Pentapotamia Indica, sewed, 4s 4to, Bounce y 1827
1101 Leckie (O. R.) Journal of a Route to Nagpoore, with a Journal
from that place to Benares, 2s 6d 4to, 1800
1102 Leguat (F.) Voyage et Avantures de, et de ses compagnons
en deux Isles desertes des Indes Orientales, plates, 2 vol.
neat, 5s . . 12mo, Amst. 1708
1103 Lockyer, Account of the Trade in India ; Description of the In-
habitants, their customs, religion, fruits, animals, &c. 2s
8vo,1711
1104 Lord (H.) Discovery of the Sect of the Banians, 2s 4to, 1630
1105 Loubere, Duroyaume de Siam, 2 vol. in 1, *2s 12mo, Amst. 1691
1106 Luillier, Voyage aux grands Indes, 2s 6d 12mo, Rott. 1726
1107 Macer (J.) Les trois Livres de l'Histoire des Indes, very
rare, 15s . . 12mo, Par. 1555
1108 Maffei (J. P.) Historiarum Indicarum, libri XVI, 16s
fol. Florent. Giunta, 1588
1109 Maffei (J. P.) Hist. Indicarum, libri XVI, 7s fol. Colon. 1593
1110 Maffei (P.) Historiarum Indicarum, lib. XVI, vellum, 7s 6d
8vo, Antverp. 1605
1111 Magistris (H. de) Relation derniere de ce qui s'est pass£ dans
les Royaumes de Madure, de Tangeor, &c. 3s 6d 8vo, 1663
1112 Malcolm (Sir J.) Government of India, bds. 5s 8vo, 1833
1113 Maracci, Relation de ce qui s'est passe dans les Indes Orien-
tales, par les Peres de Compagnie de Jesus, 1651 — Pallu,
Relation des Mission et des Voyages des Evesques Francois
envoy ez aux royaumes de la Chine, Cochinchin, &c. 1668,
2 vol. in 1, calf extra, gilt leaves, 7s 6d 8vo
1114 Maria (V.) Viaggio all' India Or i en tale, vellum, 15s fol. 1672
1115 Viucenzo Maria, II Viaggio all' Indie Orientali, 6s 4to, 1678
1116 Viaggio all' Indie Orientale del Padre F. Vincenzo Maria di S.
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1117 Marsden (W.) History of Sumatra, half russia, 5s 4to, 1811
1118 Martinez (J.) Compendio de las Historias de los descubri-
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1119 Maurice, Indian Antiquities, Dissertations on the ancient Geogra-
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1120 Montalivet (Cte. de) Voyage aux Colonies Orientales, lies de
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1122 Oriental Herald, from the commencement in 1824 to 1829,
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56 Voyages and "fraoek in India, $c. (TTirtorical
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[T. Rood,
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in India, $c. 57
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1173 Bolts (W.) Considerations on India Affairs, 2s 6d 4to, 1772
1174 Campbell (L. D ) Reply to the Strictures of the Edinburgh
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1183 Sheridan (R, B.) Speech on the fourth charge against Warren
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Warren
ass
RATTRE.] Voyages and Travels in India, 8$c.
59
1 184 Sheridan (R. B.) Comparative statement of the two Bills for
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French King, Is 6d . 4to, 1671
1189 Thoughts on the present State of onr Trade to India, autograph
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94 Measures to he pursued in India, Is fid Svo, 1772
1195 General Remarks on the System of Government in India, 2s
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177S
1 320
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1221
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V^.Rooo,
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in China, fyc. 61
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1234 Turner (S.) Account of an Embassy to the Tesboo Lama in
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1235 Voyages en Siberie, extraits des Journaux de divers Savans
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CHINA AND JAPAN.
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1242 Brunem (Vojeu de) Histoire de la Conquete de la Chine par
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1255 Martinii (M.) Situ'cas Historian 3s Svo, 1659
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toire de la Guerre des Tartares, par M. Martini, 2s 6d
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|T. Rodii,
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in Africa, <$r\ 63
11264 Spectrins, Ex Antiqnitate Oriental! de Kiaasis, la 6d
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*
VOYAGES AND TRAVELS IN AFRICA, AND AFRICAN
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8vo, Oott. 1791
1280 Account of that part of Africa inhabited by the Negroes, 2s
8vo, 1768
1281 Addison, West Barbary, or Narrative of the Heroltttum* j*
Fez and Morocco, 2s 6d tiro, 1671
9, Great Newport Street.]
I oyagei and Tnu-t
x Africa, fy. [HlOTt
1282 Addison (L.) Present stale of the Jews, (more particularly re-
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8vo
1283 Mission to Africa and the East: — Sermons and Reports for
various years, by Dealtry & the Dean of Wells, 2b 181344
1284 Proceedings of the African Association lor promoting the dis-
covery of the interior parts of Africa, vol. 1 and vol. 2
part 1, 4s . . 4to, 1790
1285 African Association Proceedings oi, maps, 2 vol. 4s 8vo. 1810
1286 African Institution. Eighth Report of, 1814 -Special Report
of the Directors, 1815, Is 6d . 8vo
1287 Alcaforado, Relation Historique de la decouverte de l'lsle de
Madere, 2s . 12mo, 1671
1288 Algiers, Epitome of the History of, Is 6d 8vo, 1750
1289 Histoire abreges des guerrcs des Algeriens avec les Hollandois,
2s 12mo, 1755
1290 Travels in Algiers, Spain. &c, with account of the Algerioes,
hoards, 2a . . 8vo, (1813)
1291 Aranda, Relation de sa Captivate et Liberie, mene a Alger en
1'an 1640 mis en liberie 1'an 1642, 4s 6d 12mo, 1656
1292 Aranda, Relation de sa Captivite et Liberie— L' Antiquite de
la Ville d'Alger, portrait, 2s 12n o, 1656
1293 Aranda (E.) Relation de son captivite et liberie, judis esclave
a Alger, plates, calf, 3s 6d . 12euo, 1671
1294 Baiatti, travels into the countries of the Abassins, or of Ethio-
pia Interior, trans, by G. D., 4s 12mo, 1670
1295 Barker (A.) Report of the Beginning, Proceedings, Over-
throws, and State of Capbune Ward and DaoBicker, the
two late famous Pirates, 12s . 4to, 1609
1296 Beechey (W.) Expedition to enplore the Northern Coast of
Africa, maps and plates, russia, gilt haven, £2 2s 4to, 1828
1297 Boothby (R.) Discovery or Description of the most famous
island of Madagascar or St, Lawrence in Asia neare unto
the East India, 9s . . 4to, 1646
1298 Bosnian (W.) Description of the Coast of Guinea, map and
cuts, 3s . . 8vo, 1705
1299 Braithwaite (Capt/) History of the Revolutions in the Empire
of Morocco, map, 2s , 8vo, 1729
1300 Browne (W. G.) Travels in Africa, Egypt, and Syria, plates,
half russia, 7e 6d . . 4to, 1799
1301 Bruce, Travels to discover the source of the Nile, 5 vol.
Life by Murray, together 6 vol. calf, neat, £3 10s 4 to, 1790
1302 Bulam. Form of a Constitution of government for a colony at
Bulain, Is 6d . . fed. 1792
1303 Ooneataggio, Relatione dell' apparecltio per bo rp rend ere
Algieri, calf, 5s , Vicenza, 1601
1304 Dan (P.) Histoire de Barbarie et de ses Corsairs, 7s 6d
Vol Paris, 1649
[T. Rodd,
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in Africa, $c. 65
1 305 Dunton (John) Journal of the Sally Fleet, with the Proceed-
ings of the Voyage, 2s . 4to, 1637
1306 Faria y Sousa, Africa Portuguesa^wepajoer, 12s fol. Lisb. 1681
1307 Finati (G.) Life and Adventures in Asia and Africa, 2 vol.
boards, 4s 6d . 12mo, 1830
1308 Follie, Voyage dans les Deserts du Sahara, 2s 8vo, 1792
1 309 Gavy de Mendougo, Historia do famoso cerco que o Xarife
pos a fortaleza de Mazagam, 7s 6d 4to, Lisb. 1607
1310 Harrison (J.) Tragical Life and Death of Muley Abdala Melek,
the late King of Barbarie, scarce, 10s 6d 4to, Delph. 1633
1311 Hennicke, Commentatio de Geographia Africse Herodotea, 3s
4to, Gott. 1788
1312 History of the Piratical States of Barbary, Algiers, Tunis,
Tripoly, and Morocco, 2s 6d 8vo, 1750
1313 Hop (H.) Nouvelle Description du Cap de Bonne- Esperance,
avec un Journal Historique d'un Voyage de terre dans
Tinterieur d'Afrique, plates, 3s 8vo, Amst, 1778
1314 Houstoun (J.) Observations on the Coast of Guinea, Is 6d
8vo, 1725
1315 Irwin's Adventures in a Voyage up the Red-Sea, on the
Coasts of Arabia and Egypt, 2 vol. calf, 6s 8vo, 1787
1316 Jannequin (C, Sieur de Rochefort) Voyage de Lybie au
royaume de Senega, le long du Niger, 5s 6d 8vo, Par. 1643
1317 Jardine's Letters from Barbary, France, Spain, Portugal, &c.
2 vol. calf 4s . 8vo, 1808
1318 Johansen (A.) Geographical and Historical Account of the
Island of Bulama, 3s 6d . 8vo, 1794
1319 Keralio, Voyage dans l'Afrique et les deux Indes, 2 vol. calf,
gilt leaves, 4s 6d . 12mo, Par, 1814
1320 Kolbe (Peter) Beschryving Van de Kaap de Goede Hoop,
2 vol. vellum, numerous plates and maps, 15s fol. 1727
1 321 Kolbe, Description du Cap de Bonne-Esperance, plates, 2 vol.
3s . . 12mo, Amst. 1741
1322 Lamiral, L'Afirique et le Peuple Affriquain consideres sous
tous leurs rapports avec notre Commerce et nos Colonies,
plates, 3s 6d . 8vo, Par. 1789
1323 Lempriere (W.) Tour from Gibraltar to Tangier, Sallee, Santa
Cruz, Tarudant, and Morocco, map, boards, 3s 8vo, 1793
1324 Letter giving a relation of Lord Howard's Voyage to Fez,
with account of merchandizing and the People of Africa,
2s 6d . 4to, 1670
1325 Letter from the King of Dauhomay to King George, Is 6d
fol. 1731
1326 Lobo, Voyage to Abyssinia, trans, by Dr. Johnson, 3s 8vo, 1735
1327 Lopez, A Report of the Kingdome of Congo, by Hartwell,
plates and maps, rare, £2 2s 4to, 1597
1328 Madeira, Historical Account of the Discovery of the Island of
Madeira, from the Portuguese, Is 6d 8vo, 1750
9, Great Newport Street] K
66 Voyages and Ravel* m Africa, (jfc [Histortcvl
1329 Moore, Travels into the inland piirta of Africa j six hundred
miles up ihe River Gambia, may, and plait's, -Is tid 8vo, 1738
1330 Morgan (J.) History of Algiers, and epitome of ike History of
Barhary, 2 vol. 4s 6d . 4ro, 1728
1331 Narrative of the Expedition to Dongola and Semiaar, under
the command of Ismail Pasha, 2s 6d 8ro, 1822
1332 Narrative of tlie Loss of the Ship Hercules on the Coast of
Caffraria, Is 6d . 8vo, 1798
1333 Nicholson (J.) Account of the establishment of tlie Falemite
Dynasty in Africa, being the Annals of that Province from
the year 290 of the Hegira to the year 300, extracted from
an ancient Arabic MS. 4s 8vo, Tilbingen, 1840
1334 Norris (R.) Reign of Bossa Ahadee, King of Dahomy, and
an Account of the African Slave Trade, with a map, 2s 6d
8vo, 1789
1335 Nunez de la Peiia, Conquista y Antiguedades de las Islas de
la gran Canaria, 10s 6d ' 4to, Mad. 1676
1336 Pananti (F.) A venture e Osservazioui sopra le Coste di Bar-
beria, 2 vol. neat, 6s 8vo, Firenze, 1817
1337 Park (M.) Travels in the Interior of Africa, plates, 2 vol.
boards, 14s . 4to, 1798-1815
1338 Pitta, Account of the Island of Madeira, 2s 6d 8vo, 1812
1339 Poiret, Voyage en Barbarie, 2 vol. calf, 5b 8vo, Pans, 1789
1340 Pringle (TO African Sketches, plate after Land seer, 3s 6d
12mo, 1834
1341 Rennell, Elucidations of the African Geography, maps, Is (id
4lo, 1793
1342 Rennell (Major) Proceedings of the Association for promoting
the discovery of the Interior Parts of Africa, maps, 2 parts,
3s . 4to, 1798-9
1343 Riley (J.) Loss of the American Brig Commerce, on the
western Coast of Africa, with account of Tombuctoo and
Wussanah, map, half bound, jieat, 9s 4to, 1817
1344 Royal African; or, Memoirs of the young Prince of Anna-
maboe, Is . 8vo
1345 St, Helena. Papers relating to the Devastation committed by
Goats on the Island of St.Helena,&c. 2s 6d 8vo l St.H*kna,l&&
1346 St. Olon (M. de) Present State of Morocco, by Motteaux,
plates, 2s 6d . 12mo, 1695
1347 Salt (H.) Voyage to Abyssinia, and travels in that country,
plates, calf, marhkd leaves, £1 la 4to, 1814
1348 Snelgrave (W.) Account of some parts of Guinea, and the
Slave Trade, 2s fid . 8vo, 1734
1349 Tangier, a Description of, with Account of Gayland, the Go-
vernor of Fez, portrait, 4s 4to, 1664
1350 Tangier, Account of the progress of the Mole, Is fbl. 1669
1351 Tangier, Present State of, and Algiers, by G. P. Is 6d
12mo, 1676
[T 1
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in Egypt, $c. 67
1352 Tangier. Present Danger of Tangier, 1679 — Letter from the
King of Morocco to Charles I, for the reducing of Sally,
Argiers, &c. 1680 — Exact Journal of the Seige of Tangier,
1680— Relation of the Success of his Majesties Forces at
Tangier, 1680 — List of the English redeemed out of Slavery
by the taking of the Golden Horse of Argiers, 1681 ; 4s 6d fol.
1353 Tangier. His Majesties Messages relating to Tangier, Is
folio, 1680
1 354 Tangier. Discourse touching Tangier, Is 4to
1355 Tangier, a Discourse touching, 2s 12mo, 1680
1356 Tangier. Narrative of a Great Engagement between the
Garrison of Tangier and the Moors, large plate, by Hollar,
1680— Great and Bloody News from Tangier, &c. 1680,
5s . . folio
1357 Tangier, Journal of the Seige of, 2s folio, 1680
1358 Tebaldi, Historia dell' impreqsa di Tripoli di Barberia, della
presa del pegnon di Velez, della Gomera in Africa, 3s
4to, 1565
1359 Ten Rhyne (W.) Shediasma de Promontorio BoneSpei ejusue
traclus incolis Hottentotis, 3s 6d l2mo, 1686
1360 Tuckey, Narrative of an Expedition to explore the river Zaire,
or Congo, maps, boards, 9s 4to, 1818
1361 Vaillant (Le) Voyage dans l'lnterieur d'Afrique, plates, 2 vol.
7s . 8vo, Paris, 1790
1362 Voyage du Sieur la Maire aux lies Canaries, Cap Verd, Se-
negal, et Gambie, plates, 4s 12mo, 1695
1363 Voyages aux Cotes de GuinGe et en Amerique, par Mr. N***,
plates, 2s 6d 12mo, Amst. 1719
1364 Voyage dans les etats Barbaresques de Maroc, Alger, &c. 5s
12mo,Pam, 1785
1365 Waddington, Journal of a visit to Ethiopia, plates, boards,
10s 6d . 4to, 1822
1366 Ximenez. Oranum Ximenii Virtute Catholicum, seu de Afri-
cano Bello, in Tremezenii Regno sub. Card. Fr. Ximenii de
Cisneros protectione per 152 Annos continuato, 5s 6d
4to, Romce, 1658
1367 Zwergius, de Pygmaeis, ^Ethiopia? Populis Dissertatio, 2s 4to
EGYPT, ANCIENT AND MODERN.
1368 Alchahirce. Descriptio Alchahirae Urbis quae Mizir, et Mazar
dicitur, very rare, 7s 6d 12mo, Vend. 1549
1369 Antes (J.) Observations on the manners and customs of the
Egyptians, map, 2s . 4to, 1800
1370 Averanus (N.) De mensibus i^Sgyptiorum, 3s 4to, Flor. 1737
1371 Baldwin (Geo.) Political Recollections relating to Egypt, 2s
8vo, 1801
9> Great Newport' Street]
68 Voyages and Travels in Egypt, Sfc. [HISTORICAL
1372 Casalius (J. B.) De ritibus profanis uflEgyptorum, etc. plates,
4s 6d . 4to, Francf. 1681
1373 Catalogue d'Antiquites Egyptiennes, &c. de M. le C. de Choi-
seul-Gouffier, Is 6d oto, Pans, 1818
1374 Chaulness (Le Dae de) Memoire sur un Monument Egyptien
consacre a la Sepulture des Animaux adore pendent la vie,
plate, 2s . 4to, 1 783
1 375 Chaulness, Another copy, half bound, 3s 6d 4to, 1 783
1376 Clarke (B. D.) the Tomb of Alexander; a Dissertation on the
Sarcophagus brought from Alexandria in the British Museum,
plates, boards, 7s 4to, Camb. 1805
1377 Copies of Original Letters from the Army of Bonaparte in
Egypt, Is 6d . 8vo, 1798
1378 De la Chambre, Discours sur les debordements du Nil, 3s
12mo, Parts, 1665
1379 Decree of the Egyptian Prjests in honor of Ptolemy the Fifth,
surnamed Epiphanes, the Greek version, Is 6d 8vo, 1802
1380 Tableau de l'Egypte pendant le sejour de l'Arm6e Francoise,
2 vol. 4s 8vo, Paris, 1793
1381 Illustrations of Egyptian Antiquities, plates, 2s 8vo, 1822
1382 Forster (Dr.) Reflections on the High Antiquity of Government,
Arts, &c. in Egypt, 2s 8vo, Oxford, 1743
1383 Gabb, Finis Pyramidis ; or Disquisitions concerning the Anti-
quity and scientific end of the great Pyramid of Memphis,
4s 6d . 8vo, 1806
1384 Granger, Relation d'un Voyage fait en Egypte, 2s
12mo, Par. 1745
1 385 Greaves (J.) Description of the Pyramids, plates, Is 6d 8vo,1646
1386 Greaves (J.) Miscellaneous Works: Description of the Pyra-
ramids : Discourse of the Roman Foot, &c. plates, 2 vol.
calf neat, 10s 6d . 8vo, 1737
1387 Grobert (J.) Description des Pyramids de Ghiz6de la Ville du
Kaire, folding plates, calf extra by Lewis, 12s 4to, Par. 1801
1388 Hamilton, iEgyptica, or account of the antient and modern
state of Egypt, boards, 12s 4to, 1809
1389 Lettre a Monsieur H*** sur les premiers Dieux ou rois
d'Egypte, 2s 6d . 12mo, Par. 1733
1390 Letters concerning the most antient Gods or Kings of Egypt,
and the Antiquity of the First Monarchs of Babylon and
China, 2s . . 8vo, 1734
1391 Maillet, Description de l'Egypte, plates, 5s 4to, Par. 1735
1392 Marin (M.) Histoire de Saladin, Sultan d'Egypte, 2 vol. 4s
12mo, Haye, 1758
1393 Martire'(Pietro) Relationi delle cose notabili della provincia
dell' Egitto da Carlo Passi, 3s 6d 8vo, Ven. 1564
1394 Murtadi's Egyptian History, treating of the Pyramids, inunda-
tion of the Nile, and other prodigies according to the opin-
ions and traditions of the Arabians, trans, by J. Davies, 3s
8vo, 1672
[T. Rodd,
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in Egypt, fyc. 69
1 395 Nogarolae (Ludovici Comitis) Dialogus qui inscribitar Timo-
theus, sive de Nilo, 5s 4to, Vend. 1552
%* u Cette edition est devenue si rare, que Fred. Nogarola ayant youIu en pub-
lier une seconde, ne fut jamais en trouver, un exemplaire, etfut oblige* de
se servir pour cela du Manuscrit original de l'auteur." — Memoires de Ni-
cer on, tome 12, p. 308.
1396 Non-Military Journal, or observations made in Egypt by an
Officer of the British Army, plates, 2s 4to, 1803
1397 Norden (F. L.) Drawings of some Ruins and Colossal Statues
at Thebes, in Egypt, plates, 2s 6d 4to, 1741
1398 Norden, Travels in Egypt and Nubia, by Templeman, plates,
2s 6d . 8vo, 1757
1399 Olivae (J.) In marmor Isiacum exercitationes, plates , 2s
8vo, Roma, 1719
1400 Origny, l'Egypte Ancienne, ou Memoires Historiques et Cri-
tiques sur les Objets les plus importans, 2 vol. neat, 5b
12mo, 1762
1401 Origny, Chronologie des Rois du Grand Empire des Egyptiens,
2 vol. 3s 6d . . 12mo, 1765
1402 Pauw, Recherches Philosophiques sur les Egyptiens et les
( 1 <hinois, 2 vol. 3s . 12mo, 1773
1403 Perizonii ^Egyptiarum Originum et temporum Antiquissimo-
rum investigatio, 2 vol. 3s 6d 8vo, 1711
1404 Reynier (Gen.) de l'Egypte aprds la Bataille de Heliopolis,
Carte de la Basse Egypte, 3s 8vo, Par. 1802
1405 Reynier, State of Egypt after the Battle of Helopolis, with
general observations on the Country, map, 2s 6d 8vo, 1802
1406 Savary, Lettres sur l'Egypte, 3 vol. 5s 8vo, Par. 1785
1407 Savary, Lettres sur l'Egypte, maps, 3 vol. — Lettres sur la
Grece ; together 4 vol. calf, 4s 6d 8vo, ib. 1786
1408 Sonnini, Voyage dans la haute et basse Egypte, the atlas of
plates only, 2s 6d . 4to, ib. 1799
1409 Vansleb (F.) Present State of Egypt, or a new Relation of a
late Voyage to that Kingdom, 2s 6d 8vo, 1678
1410 Vossius(L) De Nili et aliorum fluvionim origine,2s 4to,1666
1411 Wendelinus (M. F.) de Admirandi Nili, 5s 8vo, 1623
1412 White, Egyptica. Observations on certain Antiquities of
Egypt, Pompey's Pillar, plates, 6s 4to, 1801
141 2* White, Another copy, calf, 7s 6d • 4to
1413 Witte, versuch ueber den ursprung der Pyramiden m Egypten
und der Ruinen von Persepolis, 3s 6d 8vo, Leip. 1789
1414 Wyche (P.) Short Relation of the River Nile, 4s 12mo, 1669
1415 Wyche (Sir P.) Short Relation of the River Nile, neat, 4s
8vo, 1791
9, Great Newport Street.}
Voyayns mtil TrarcU hi America, $c. [Historical
1416 A. (T.) Carolina, or a description of tlie present stale of that
Country, toiled, 8s . 4to, 1682
1417 Aborigines (British (Settlement*), Papers and Report from the
Select Committee on, 2 vol. 10s foL 1834-36
1418 Aboriginal Tribes, Parliamentary Report on, with comments
by the Aboriginal Society, 2s 6d 8vo, 1838
1419 Abreu, Discurao J u rid ico-Historico- Politico sobre las Va-
cantes de Indias, 9s fol. Mad. 1769
1420 Account of the Spanish Set tie men Is in America, maps, 4s 6d
Svo, 1762
1421 Account of (he Spanish Settlements in America, wanting the
map, 3s 6d . 8ro, Edinb. 1762
1422 Account of M. de la Salle's but expedition and discoveries in
N. America, 3s 6d . 8vo, 1698
1423 Acosta (J.) De Natura Novi Orbis, et de promulgutioue Evan-
gelii, apud Barbaros, 4s 8vo, Salmant. 15S9
1424 Acosta, De promulganda Evangelia, apud Barbaras, sive de
procuranda Iiidorum salute, 5s 6d 8vo, Lugd. 1670
1425 Acosta, Natural! Historic of the East and West Indies, trans,
by E. G„ 9a . 4to, 1604
1426 Acugna's Voyage up the river Amazons to Peru — Acarete's
Voyage up the river Plata — Grillet's Voyage in search of
the lake of Parinia, maps, 4s 8v.>, 1698
1427 Adair (J.) History of the American Indians, map, calf. 16s
4lu, 1775
1428 Adams (Hannah) A Summary History of New England, 6s
8vo, Dedham. 1799
1429 Adams (J.) Defence of the Constitutions of Government of the
U. S. of America, 3 vol. boards. 8s Svo, 1794
1430 Adams (J.) Defence of the Constitution and Government of the
U. Slates, 3 vol. calf, 10s 8vo, 1 797
1431 Address on the Importance of Trade with America, Is 6d
Svo, 1785
1432 Agniar, Sumarios de la Hecopilacion de las Leyes, &c. para
las Indias Occident ales, wormed, 12s fol. Mud. 1628
1433 Allen (R.) Essay on the nature and methods of carrying on a
Trade to the S. Sea, Is 6d Svo, 1722
1434 Almon (J.) Collection of the most interesting Tracts on the
subject of taxing the American Colonies, by Dummer, Otis,
Dulaney, Dickenson, &c. 3 vol, 12s Svo, 1766-67
1435 Almon's Remembrancer, 1775. 2s Svo, 1775
1436 Remembrancer (of the events in America), with the prior Do-
cuments, 15 vol, (wanting vol. 2 and 15) £1 5s Svo
1437 Alsop (Rich.) Poem to the Memory of Presidenl Washington,
Is . . 8to,1808
fT. Rodd,
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in America, fyc. 71
1438 Amandi Zierixeensis Cronica ad an. Dom. 1534, Adjectae sunt
tres Epistolae, ex nova maris Oceani Hispania, de fructu
mirabili illic surgentis novae Ecclesise, 7s sin. 8vo, Ant. 1534
1439 America. Atlas of the United States, published by Stockdale,
3s 6d . . 8vo, 1794
1440 North American Pilot, Second part, for New England, New
York, &c. in 20 maps, 9s atlas fol. 1807
1441 L'Anierique Poeme,en quatre Chants, 3s 4to, Lond. 1780
1442 Case and Claim of the American Loyalists, Is 8vo, 1783
1443 Acts or Laws of Massachusetts Bay relative to the American
Loyalists, Is 6d . 8vo, 1785
1444 Claims of the American Loyalists reviewed and maintained, 2s
8vo, 1788
1445 American State Papers on the differences with France, 2s
4to, 1798
1446 American Criticisms on Mrs. Trollope's Domestic Manners of
the Americans, Is . 8vo, 1833
1447 American Kalendar, or U. S. Register, Is 6d 12mo, 1795
1448 American Mining Companies, Inquiry into the plans, &c. of
the, Is 6d . 8vo, 1825
1449 Americans against Liberty, Is 6d 8vo, 1775
1450 Anderson (D.) Canada. A View of the importance of the
British American Colonies, map, 3s 8vo, 1814
1451 Andrews (J.) History of the War with America, France,
Spain, and Holland, 1775.1783, ports, maps, fyc. 4 vol.
calf, 10s 6d . . 8vo, 1785
1452 Anspach (L. A.) History of Newfoundland, maps, boards, 4s
8vo, 1819
1453 Answer of the Company of Royal Adventurers trading to
Africa to the Petition of Sir Paul Painter, Sir F. Gorges, and
others concerned in the plantations in America, 5s 4to, 1667
1454 Answer to the Declaration of the American Congress, Is 6d
8vo, 1776
1455 Antepara (J. M.) South American Emancipation — Documents,
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1456 Antilles. Histoire et commerce dcs Antilles Angloises, map,
2s 6d . . . 12mo, 1758
1457 Antinomians and Familists condemned by the Synod of Elders
in New-England, 7s 6d . 4to, 1644
1458 Appeal to the Justice and Interests of the People on the present
Disputes with America, Is 6d . 8vo, 1776
1459 Second Appeal to the justice and interests of the people on the
measures respecting America, Is 6d 8vo, 1775
1460 Appeal to Reason and Justice, in which the present contest
with the revolted Colonies is impartially considered, 2s
8vo, 1778
1461 Appeal to the British Nation on the Affairs of £outh America,
particularly those of New Granada, Is 6d 8vo, 1825
9, Cheat Newport Street.]
72 Voyages and Travels in America, 9fc. [HiSl
1462 Appeal to Knowledge, or discissions of Hie Preliminaries <:
Peace signed, Nov. 3, 1762, la 6d
8vn, 1763
1463 Apollunii (Levini) De Peravias iiweutione, et rebus in eadeu
gratis, map, vnburmd, 5s 8vo, Ant, 1567
1464 Argument in Defence of the exclusive Right claimed by the
Colonies to tax themselves, 2s 8vo, 1774
1465 Arnold (C. H.) History of North and South America, 2s 6d
12mo, 1781
1466 Articles of Peace between G. B,, France, Spain, and the U.
States, Is 6d . . 8vo, 1783
1467 Articles of Union between the States, 2b
4to, Williamsburg, 1778
1468 Ashley (J.) Memoirs and Considerations concerning the Trade
and Revenues of the British Colonies in America, 3s 6d
8vo. 1740
1468* Aslitey, Another copy, morocco, 4a 6d 8vo, 1740
1469 Atlas of the State of New York ; containing- a Map of the
State, and of the several Crudities, projected and drawn from
Documents deposited in tlie Public Offices bj Simeon de Wit,
pursuant to an act of the Legislature general, half rvssia,
£3 10s . . New York, 1829
1470 Auteroche, Voyage to California, to observe the Transit ot
Venus, calf, 3s 6d . . '8vo, 1778
1471 Ayscough (S.) Remarks on the letters of an American farmer,
ls6d . . 8vo, 1783
1472 Backus (I. - ) History of New-England, with particular reference
to the Baptists, vol. 1, 5s 6d 8vo, Boston, 1771
1473 Bahama Islands, Votes of the House of Assembly, Is fid
fol. Nassau, 1801
1474 Bandini, Vita de Amerigo Vespucci, port, calf, 8a 4to, 1745
1475 Bannister (J. W.) Plans for settling m Upper Canada, Is M
8vo, 1826
1476 Barbados. Articles of Agreement with Lord Willoughby
for the rendition of Baibadoes, 2s 6d 4to, 1552
1477 Earbadoes. Groans of tlie Plantations ; or. account of suffer-
ings by the heavy impositions upon suu-ar, 2s 6d 4to, 1689
1478 Barbadoes Acts from 1643 to 1762, 7s 6d fol. 1764
1479 Baring (A.) Inquiry into the causes and consequences of the
Orders in Council, 2s . 8vo, 1808
1480 Barlow, Letters to the Citizens of the United States, 2s 8vo, 1800
1481 Baron, History of Colonization of the free states of Antiquity,
4s 6d . 4to, 1777
1482 Barlolomei, ('America Poima Eroicn,_//»M portrait, nearer, 15s
fol. fiesta, 1650
1483 Bartram (W.) Travels through the Carolinas, Georgia, the
Floridas, &c. plates, 5s 6d . 8vo, 1794
1484 Beatty (C.) Journal of a Two Months' Tour, with a view of
promoting Religion among the frontier Inhabitants of
Pennsylvania, 3s . 8vo, 1768
[ T. RODD,
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in America, $c. 73
1485 Beaumont (J. A. B.) Travels in Buenos Ayres and the adjacent
Provinces of the Rio de la Plata, map, 2b 6d 8vo, 1828
1486 Belknap (J.) History of New Hampshire, 3 vol. 12s
8vo, Boston, 1813
1487 Bellegarde (Abb6) Voyages made into the North and South of
America, plates, 2s od . 8vo, 1711
1488 Bellin, Description Geographique des Isles Antilles possedees
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in, Description des Isles Antilles possedees par les Anglois,
maps, red morocco, gilt leaves, 7s 6d 4to, 1756
1490 Bentham (E.) De tumultibus Americanis deque eorum concita-
toribus meditatio, Is 6d 8vo, Oxon. 1776
1491 Berkeley (Bp.) Miscellany, containing Verses on the prospect
of planting Arts and Learning in America — Proposal for
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1492 Letters to the Earl of Hillsborough from Governor Bernard,
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1493 Bernard (Governor) Select Letters on the Trade and Govern-
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1494 Bertie (Willoughby, Earl of Abingdon) Thoughts on the
Letter of Burke on the affairs of America, Is 6d 8vo
1495 Second Thoughts ; or Observations upon Lord Abingdon's
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1496 Beverley (R.) The History and Present State of Virginia,
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1497 Bibliotheca Americana ; or, chronological catalogue of curious
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1499 Biddle (N.) Eulogium on Thomas Jefferson, Is 6d
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1500 Biet (A.) Voyage de la France equinoxiale en l'lsle de Cay-
enne (avec Kemarques sur la langue de Galibis, et un
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1501 Birkbeck (M.) Notes on a Journey in America, from Virginia
to the Illinois, 2s 6d . 8vo, 1818
1502 Bishop (A.) Connecticut Republicanism, an Oration on the
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1503 Bliss (H.) Consideration of the claims and conduct of the
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1504 Blodget (S.) Economica, a Statistical Manual for the U. States
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1505 Blome (R.) Description of the Island of Jamaica, with the
other isles and territories in America to which the English
are related, maps, 5s . 8vo, 1678
1506 Bollan, Importance and advantage of Cape Breton stated,
maps, 3s . 8vo, 1746
9, Great Newport Street.] l
74 Voyages and Travels in America, o)c [HISTORICAL
1507 Bollan. The acquest ol' dominion and Hie [(Imitation of English
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4to, privately printed, 1762
1508 Bossi, Vita di Crcstoforo Colombo, con appendice di documen-
li rari, portrait, 5s 6d . Svo, MX. 1818
150!) Boston Chronicle for 1768, with many supplements and extra-
ordinary papers, 10s fid . 4to, Boston, 1768
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1511 Boucher (J.) View of the causes and consequences of the
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1512 Boucher(J.) Another copy, boards, 3s6d 8vo, 1797
1513 Boundary Question. Mcraoires des Com missa ires sur les pos-
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12mo, Amst. 1755
1514 All Hie memorials of tlie courts of G. Britain and France re-
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1515 Compressed view of the points to be discussed in treating with.
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1516 Bouquet (H.) Account of tbe expedition against the Ohio
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1517 Bowles (Capt.) Suggestions for the speedy conveyance of our
reinforcements to Canada, Is . 8vo, 1837
1518 Brackenridge (H. M.) An Eulogium of the great men who have
fallen in the contest will! Great Britain, 2s 4to, Phitad. 1779
1519 Brackenridge (H. M.) Voyage to S. America by order of tbe
American Government, in 1817 and 1818, 2 vol. lioards, 5s
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1520 Brasil. Abuanach de Corte do Rio de Janiero, 181 1, 1* 6d
12mo, Rio, 1810
1521 Brasit. Projecto de Constituicao para o imperio do Brasil,
1824-Oracao Funcbre uas exequias de D. Joao VI impe-
rador do Brazil, 1826 — Remarques sur la declaration du
Marquis de Barbaceoa relativement au rctour de la Prin-
cesse du Gram-Para a Rio-Janiero, 183(1— A Expozieao do
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rio : e o Brasil Republica commentada, 1 831 , 5s 8vo & 4to
1522 Brazilian improvements more particularly as regards tlie pro-
vince of Espirito Santo, Is 6d 8vo, 1825
1523 Journal of the New England Land Forces during tbe Expedi-
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1524 Brickell (J.) Natural History of North Carolina, 8s
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1526 I. P. Brissot(VVarville) Voyage dans les Etats-Unis de TAme-
rique, 3 vol. 3s . . 8vo, Paris, 1791
1526 Brulii (.loach.) Historia? Pervana; ordinis Ereinitarum S. P.
Augustini Libri 18, vellum, 16s fol. Auto, 1651
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in America, $c. 75
1527 Buchanan (J.) Sketches of the History, Manners, and Customs
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1528 Buell (S.) Narrative of the Revival of Religion in the Congre-
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1529 Relation of R. M.'s Voyage to Buenos- Ayres, and from thence
by land to Potosi, 3s 12mo, 1716
1530 Letters from Buenos- Ayres and Chili, plates, 2s 6d 8vo, 1819
1531 Bullock (W.) Journey through the Western States of North
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1532 Burgoyne (Gen.) Speeches on Vyner's and Hartley's motions,
lsbd . . 8vo, 1778
1533 Burgoyne (Gen.) Letter relative to his return from America,
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1534 Reply to General Burgoyne's Letter, Is 6d 8vo, 1779
1535 Burgoyne (Lieut.-Gen.) State of the Expedition from Canada,
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1536 Burgoyne (Lieut. -Gen.) State of the Expedition from Canada,
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1537 Essay on modern Martyrs, with a Letter to General Bur-
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1538 Burke (E.) Account of the European Settlements in America,
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1539 Burke (E.) Account of the European Settlements in America,
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1541 Burke (E.) Speech of, on his moving his Resolutions for conci-
liation with the Colonies, ls6d 4to, 1775
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1545 Burke (E.) Speech on American Taxation, Is 6d 8vo, 1775
1546 Burke (E.) Letter on the affairs of America, Is 8vo, 1777
1547 Answer to the Letter of Edmund Burke to the Sheriffs of Bris-
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1548 Answer from the Electors of Bristol to E. Burke's Letter, Is 6d
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1549 Abingdon (Earl of) Thoughts on Burke's Letter on the affairs
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1550 Another edition, with a Dedication to the collective] Body of
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1551 Letter to the Earl of Abingdon on his treatment of Lord Mans-
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9, Great Newport Street.]
Voi/ilf/fs ,i/i,l TVmwfa W .).»(■,';,■/,, „«,-,;. [HJ3T0R1
76
1552 BurnabyfA.) Travels through the Middle Settlements ii
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1 553 Burnaby (A.) Travels through (he Middle Settlement* in North
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1554 Buroaby, Anothercopy, bound, 7* 4to, 1798
1555 Burton (It.) English Empire in America, plates, 2s 6d
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12mo, 1711
1557 Burton (H.) Emplish Empire in America — English Accjitifti-
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1558 Butel-Dumont, Histoire et Commerce des Colonies Angloiwfl
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1559 ByfieldfN.) Account of the late Revolution in New England. 6a
4to, 1689
1660 Calancha, Chronica del orden de S. Augustin en el Peru, red
morocco, gilt haves, £2 10a fcl. Barcel. 1638
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1562 Campbell, History of the Spanish America, calf, 4s Svo, 1741
1563 Beckford (YV.) Appeal Case, v. Campbell, and Answer relat-
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1564 Canada. Relation de ce qui s'est pass6 en la Mission des Peres
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[T. F
LITERATURE.] Voyage* and Travels in America, $c. T7
1576 Canada. Political and Historical Account of Lower Canada, 3s
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1577 Perrault, Code Rural da Bas43anada» l&32*~Heney, Com-
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— Memoire de D. B. Viger et de son epouse contre T.
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men in the West Indies— Papers relating to Trade; Govern-
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2*ol.6s . . 4to, 1741
1583 Carolina. Case of Protestant Dissenters in Carolina, 6*
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1584 Letter front South Carolina, giving an Account thereof, 3s
8vo, 1732
1585 Account of the Provinces of South Carolina and Georgia, 3s
8vo, 1733
1586 Ode to a Friend on our leaving South Carolina, Is 4to, 1783
1587 Carrunza (D. G.) Description of Coasts, &c. of the Spanish
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1589 Las Casas (Bart de) Remedios para Reformacion de las India*,
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quosdam devastatarum verissima, plates by Lh Bry, first
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1591 Las-Casas, Voyages et decouvertes des Espagnoles dans les
Indes occidentales, avec les Voyages du S. de Montauban
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1592 Casteil (W.) Petition for the propagating of the Gospel in
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ca, from the equinoctiall northwards and of the adjacent isles,
8s . 4to,1644
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stained, rare, 10s 6d 4to, Mad. 1589
1 595 Caulin, Historia de la, Nue va Andalucia, plates, 18s fol. ib. 1 779
9, Great Newport Street.]
78 Voyages and Travels m Amrrtcu, $c, [HISTORICAL
1596 Chabert, Voyage dans I'Ainerique Seplentrionale, calf, gilt
leaves, 9s . 4to, 1753
1597 Charlevoix, Voyage to N. America— Description and natural
History of Canada and Louisiana, plates, 2 vol. Gs6d8vo,1766
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1600 Chalmers (G.) Opinions on interesting Subjects of Public Law
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1606 Chandler (T.) Appeal to the Public in behalf of the Church of
America, 3s 8vo, New York, 1767
1607 Chanvalon, Voyage a la Martinique
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1610 Charlevoix, Histoire el description generate de la nouvelle
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1611 Charlevoix, Histoire du Paraguay, plates, 6 vol. 10s 6d
12mo, 1757
1612 Charpentier-Cossigiiy, Moyensd'ameliorationct dcrestauration
proposes au gouvernemcnt et aux habitaus des Colonies,
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1613 Charters of the British Colonies in America, calf, 4s 8vo
1614 Chaslellux (Marq. de) Voyage dans l'Amerique Septentrionale,
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1615 Chastellux (Marquis de) Travels in North America, 2 vol.
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1616 Chauncy (C, of Haward College, N. England) Gods Mercy
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1617 Chauncy (C) Sermon before the House of Representatives of
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of the proceedings of the Court of Boston against him. 8s
4to, 1647
[T. 1
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in America, fyc. 79
1620 Christie, Memoirs of the administration of the Colonial Govern-
ment of Lower Canada from 1807 to 1815, 3s 6d
Svo, Quebec, 1818
1621 Clinton (Sir H.) Narrative relative to his condoct daring Iris
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servations on Cornwallis's Answer, 1783 ; calf, 4s 6d 8vo
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3s . 8vo, 1818
1624 Cockburn (J.) Journey overland from the Gulf of Honduras to
the great South Sea, map, 3s 8vo, 1735
1625 Code Noir, Reglemens pour le commerce, &c. des Negres
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1626 Golden (C.) History of the five Indian Nations of Canada, 5s
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1627 Colden (C.) The History of the five Indian Nations of Canada,
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1628 Colombo. Elogio Storico di Cristoforo Colombo, e di Andrea
Doria, portraits, 9s 4to, Parma, 1781
1629 The Colonial Policy of G. Britain considered with relation to
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80 Vi'i/nyes and Trnveh in America, fyc. [HISTORICAL
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1649 Cooper (T.) some Information concerning America, map, 3s fid
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1651 Coppier, Histoire u( Voyages des hides Occident ales, scarce,
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1655 Correspondence between G. B. and the U. S. relative to the
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1657 Cortesii (Ferd.) De nova mans Oi'.eani Hyspania narratio — De
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incolarum mores, puerorum sacriticia et religiosas person as,
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damaged by worms, very rare, £a 3b t'oL Norimb'. 1524
•„• The first edition of ihe Latin version of Coru-a's Letter'
[T,I
• Rom,,
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in America, fyc. 81
1659 Cortesii (Ferd.) Histori von Newen Hispanien, 7s fol. Aug. 1550
1660 Cortesii (Ferd.) von dem Newen Hispanien, zwo gantz
lustige Historien, in hochteutsch sprach von Xysio Betuleio,
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1661 Cortes (F.) Correspondanoe avec l'empereur Charles V, sur la
cooquete du Mexique, 3s 6d l2mo, 1778
1662 Cotton (J.) The way of the churches of Christ in New
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1663 Coxe, Description of the English province of Carolina, by the
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1664 Coxe (T.) View of the United States of America, 3s 6d 8vo, 1795
1665 Crevecour, Voyage dans la haute Pensylvanie et dans l'etat de
New York, calf extra, marb. leaves, 3 vol. 16s 8vo, Par. 1801
1 666 Col.Crokett's exploits and adventures in Texas, 1 s 6d 12mo,1837
1667 D. (J. sometime preacher of Stevens, Coleman Street) Profes-
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1668 Da Costa, Memoria sobre a necessidade de abolir a introducao
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1669 Dalrymple (A.) Catalogue of .Authors who have written on
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1670 Darby, the Emigrant's Guide to the Western and South-
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1671 Darien. A Collection of Tracts relating to the Scots colony
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. — Lettres Patentes pour le Compagnie, &c. 1697— Informa-
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1674 Scotland's present duty, a call to the Nobility, &c. (to uphold
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1674*Defence of the Scots settlement at Darien, Edin. 1699— De-
fence of the Scots abdicating Darien, 1700, 5s 8vo
9, Great Newport Street.] M
82 Voyages and Travel.? in America, ftc. [Historical
1675 Davis (J.) Travels of four Years and ft half in the United States
of America, calf, 3s ., 8vo, 1803
1676 Dawson (E.) Discourse delivered at Quebec on the reduction
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1677 Day (T.) Tracts, upon the present state of England and Ame-
rica, &e. calf, 3s 6d . . 8vo, 1785
1678 Declaration by the Representatives of the United States, Is (id
8vo, 1775
1679 Denton (D.) Description of New York, 18s 4to, 1670
1680 Depons, Voyage a la partie orientals dc la terre-ferme daus
l'Amerique nn;ridiouale, map and plans, 3 vol. calf, 5s
8vo, Par. 1806
1681 Diaz del Castillo, Historia de la conquista de la Nueva
Espana, vellum, £1 4s . fol. Mad. 1632
1682 Dickenson (J.) God's protecting Providence, &c. evidenced in
the deliverance ot Robert Barrow and others tVum Shipwreck,
also from the devouring jaws of the inhuman Cannibals of
Florida, 2s . . 12mo, 1787
1683 Dickinson, Letters from a Farmer in Pensylvania, Philad.
1768 — Power of G. Britain founded on the liberty of the
Colonies, ib. 1768 (Sir P. Francis's autograph), 1 vol.
4a 6d . . 8vo, v. y.
1684 Dickinson, Letters from a Fanner in Pennsylvania, 2s 8vo, 1768
1685 Dickinson, Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania to the inha-
bitants of the British Colonies, Is 6d " 8vo, 1774
1686 Discours, hoe veel de Vereenighde Kederlanden gbelegeu ia
aeu de Oost ende West Jndische Novigalie, 3s 6d
4io, Am/itm, 1621
1687 Discours vant ghemeyne Lants welvaert, voor desen de Oost,
ende nu oock dc West-Indische generate Cnmpaignie aen-
ghevanghen, woodcut ofPotasi, 3s 6d 4to, 1C22
1688 Dobbs (A.) Account of the Countries adjoining Hudson's Bay,
plan, 5s 6d . . 4to, 1744
1689 Dobbs, Another copy, large paper, 7s
1690 Dobrizhoffer (M.) Account of the Abiponea, an equestrian
" , 1822
People of Paraguay, 3 vol. 8s
1691 Donaldson (W.) North America,
. descriptive Poem", with
ir and singular conduct of
4to, 1757
the value and importance
li6d 8vo, 1831
remarks upon the political In
its inhabitants, 2a 6d
1692 Douglas (Sir H.) Consideration
of the British N. American pc
1693 Douglass (W.) Summary, Historical and' Political, of the Bri-
tis'h Colonies in America, 2 vol. calf, 7s fid 8vo, 1755
1694 Doyle (W.) Account of the British Dominions beyond the
Atlantic, map, 4s 6d . 8vo
1695 Duboceage (Mad.) La Colonibiade, ou la foi portee au nouveau
mniide PoeiMt, purlrait and 'plates, 2s 8vo, 1758
1696 Do Calvet (P.) Case, containing an account of his imprison-
ment in Quebeck, 3a 6d 8vo, privately printed, 1 784
[T. Rono,
--1
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in America, §c. 83
1697 Duche* (J.) Caspipina's Letters, with the Life and Character of
Wm. Penn, proprietor of Pennsylvania, 2 vol. 2s 6d
l2mo, 1777
1698 Dummer, Defence of the New England Charters, 3s 4to, 1721
1699 Dummer, Defence of the New England Charters, 3s 6d
8vo, 1745
1700 Dummer (J.) Letter concerning the late expedition to Canada,
2s . . 8vo, 1712
1701 Da Pratz, History of Louisiana, maps, 3s 8vo, 1774
1702 Edwards (— ) Narrative of the conversion of many hundred
souls in Northampton in New England, 3s 6d 12mo, 1738
1703 Eguiara, Bibliotheca Mexicana, sive eruditoram Historia vi-
rorum qui in America boreali nati, vel alibi geniti, in ipsam
domicilio ant studiis asciti, calf extra, gilt leaves, rare,
£1 16s . fol. MexicU 1755
1704 Eliot (John, First Preacher of the Gospel to the Indians in
America) Life by C. Mather, 6s 18mo, 1694
1705 Ellis ( — ) Narrative of a Journey to New Britain, in the plain
of the Missouri, 3s • 8vo, 1820
1706 Emancipation in Disguise, or the true Crisis of the Colonies,
sewed>2s . . 8vo, 1807
1707 Engel, Memoires et Observations Gfeographiques et Gra-
phiques et Critiques sur la situation des Pays septentrionaux
de l'Asie et de TAmerique, 4s 6d 4to, Laus. 1765
1708 Engel, Essai sur cette question, Quand et comment l'Amerique
a-t-alle 6te peupl6e? 8s 4to, Amst. 1767
1709 English Pilot, book IV, describing the West India Navigation
from Hudson's Bay to the River Amazones, with several
new Charts, by Mount and Page, 4s 6d atlas fol. 1780
1710 Enquiry into the cause of the Alienation of the Delaware and
Shawanese Indians, map, 3s 6d 8vo, 1759
1711 An Epistle from Edward, an American Prisoner in England, to
Harriet in America, Is 6d . 4to, 1779
1712 Esqueraeling, History of the Buccaniers of America, plates,
£1 4s . . 4to, 1684
1713 Esquemeling (J.) Bucaniers of America, portraits and plates,
9s . . 4to, 1684
1714 Esquemeling, the Bucaniers of America, plates, last leaf of
the table wanting, 5s 6d . 4to, 1684
1715 History of the Buccaniers of America, maps and plates, 6s
8vo, 1704
1716 History of the Bucaniers of America, 2 vol. uncut, 6s 12mo, 1771
1717 Essay on Trade and Commerce, with reflections on the Im-
portance of our Trade to America, 2s 8vo, 1770
1718 Estrada on the dispute between Spain and her American colo-
nies, by W. Burdon, 2s . 8vo, 1812
1719 Evans, Analysis of a Map of the middle British Colonies in
America, imperfect, Is 6d
4to, Philadelphia, printed by B. Franklin and D. Hill, 1775
9, Great Newport Street.]
64 Voyage* and TVaVelsin America, £c. [HISTORICAL
1730 Bvfuti (C.) Letter to Wesley, occasioned by liis calm Address,
la . !2mo, 1775
1721 Everetl ( — ) America, or a general Survey of (lie political si-
tuation of Hie Western Continent, calf, 7s 6d 8vo, 1828
1722 Exameu Impartial tic* Traiti's concilia entre la G, Bretagneet
laRepubliqiiedesProvinces-Uniea, Is6d8vo,£ori«;/M779
1723 Exile of Major Gen. EuBtace, a Citizen of the U. 8. of America,
by order of tlie Duke of Portland, 3s 8vo, 1797
1724 Fairbanks (C. R ) Reports and Papers relating to a Canal in-
tended to connect the Harbour of Halifax with the Basin of
the Mines, maps, 3s 6d 8vo, Halifax, N. S. 1826
1725 Fairraan (Capt.) Series of Letters on the existing tliffen ihm-
between England and America, Is M 8vo, 1813
1726 Fast Sermon, Feb. 10, 1779, shewing the Tyrrany and oppres-
sion of the British King and Parliament, respecting- the
American Colonies, 2s 6d
Svo, no place, nor name of printer, or publisher (1779)
1727 Featly (J,) Sermon to Sir Thomas Warner and the rest of his
companie bound to the West Indies, scarce, 5s 6d 4to, 1629
1728 Fermiii, Description Historique geographique et physique de
la colonic de Surinam, plates, 2 \o\. calf, 5s Svo, Amnt. 1769
1 729 Fermin (P.) Tableau Historicjue et Politique de la Colonic de
Surinam, 3a . 8vo, Maeai. 177S
1730 Fernandez (J. P.) Histories Narratio de Missionibus Patrum
Soc. Jesu apud Qriqintoa, Ptraquittia! populoa, 5a 6d
4to, a. v. 1733
1731 Ferreirade Sylva (S.1 Relacao do sitio du nova colonia do Sa-
cramento, plans, 6a 4to, Lisb. 1748
1732 Figueiredo, Hidrographia, exame de Pilotoa. com us roteiros
de Portugal peru o Brasil, rio da Praia, Guine, S. Thome,
Angolla, etlndias de Portugla y Caslellu, 18s 4to, Lisb. 1625
1 733 Florida, Description of the Windward Passage mid Gulph of,
2s Cd . 4tu, 1739
1734 Franklin. Journey to the shores of the Polar Sea, plates
coloured, calf extra, mar bled leaves, £1 10s 4to, 1823
1735 Franklin (B.) Interest of Ci re at Britain considered with regard
to her Colonies and the acquisition of Canada and Guadn-
loupe, Is fid . Svo, 1760
1736 Franklin (B.) Examination relative to the Repeal of tlie Ame-
rican Stamp Act, 2s . Svo, 1767
1737 Frauklin (B.) Two tracts: information to those who would
remove to America, &c. Is 6d Svo, 1784
1738 Fullartou (Col.) Refutation of the pamphlet which Col. Picton
lately addressed to Lord Hobart, Is 6d 4to, 1805
1739 Frezier, Relation du Voyage de la Mer du Sud aux c.'tk-s du
Chili, Sec. plates, 2 vol. calf, 4s 6d 12tno, Amst, 1717
174n Frezier, Voyage to the South Sea, and along the coasts of
Chili and Peru, with postscript by Dr. Hallev, plates, 7s
4to, 1717
I r. BOB?,
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in Arnewa, 8fc. 86
1741 Funes, Ensayo de la Historia civil del Paraguay, Buenos Ayres
y Tucuman, 3 vol. (wanting two leaves J, 10s
4to, Buenos Ay res, 1816
1742 Gage (T.) A new Survey of the West Indies, 8s foL 1648
1743 Gage (T.) Journal of his travailes 3300 miles within the main
land of America ; with a Grammar of the Indian Tongue
called Pocbouchi, 10s 6d . foL 1655
1744 Gage (T.) Travels, another edition, map, 6s 8vo, 1677
1745 Gage, another copy, 7s 6d 8vo, 1677
1746 Gage, another edition, 3s 6d 8vo, 1699
1747 Gage, another copy, 7s
1748 Galloway's Letters to a Nobleman on the conduct of the war in
the middle Colonies, 1780 — Cool Thoughts on American in-
dependence, 1780 — Galloway's Examination before the H.
of Commons, 1779 — Letter to Lord Howe on his Naval
conduct in the American war, 1779— Reply to Gen. Bur*
goyne's Letter to his Constituents, 1780 — Letters of Papinian
on the American Congress, 1779 — Strictures upon the Phila-
delphia Mischianza or triumph, 1779 ; one vol. 6s 8vo
1749 Galloway's Plain Truth, or a Letter to the author of Dispas-
sionate Thoughts on the American War, Is 6s 8vo, 1780
1750 Galloway's Letter to Lord Howe on his Naval Conduct in the
American War, Is 6d . 8vo, 1781
1751 Gambarae (L.) De navigatione Christophori Columbi Poema,
very scarce, 14s . 8vo, Ronue, 1585
1752 Gardiner (Capt) Account of the Expedition to the West
Indies, plate, 5s 4to, Baskerville, 1762
1753 Gardiner (J.) Oration at Boston in celebration of the anniver-
sary of American independence, manuscript additions by
the author, 2s 6d . . 4to,1785
1754 Gardyner (G.) Description of the New World, or America,
islands and continent, and by what people those regions are
now inhabited, scarce, 8s 12mo, 1651
1755 Gass, Journal of the Voyages and Travels of Lewis and Clarke,
from the mouths of the Missouri to the Pacific, 3s 8vo, 1808
1756 Gatford (L.) Remonstrance of the present sad state of the
colonie in Virginia, 12s . • 4to, 1657
1757 Georgia. New Voyage to Georgia and S. Carolina, 5s 8vo,1737
1758 Georgia, Enquiry into the state and utility of the Province of,
3s 6d . . . 8vo, 1741
1759 Account of the causes that have retarded the progress of
Georgia, 2s 6d . . 8vo, 1743
1760 Gerbier Douvilly (B.) Description manifesting that greater
profits are to be done in the hottthan the cold parts of Ame-
rica — Amerikaensche Voyagie door den Ritter B. Gerbier
— Advertissements for men inclyned to plantations in Ame-
rica, badly cut, very curious, los 4to, Rotterdam (1660 ?)
1 761 Gibson (J.) Journal of the Siege against Cape Breton, plate, 2s
8vo, 1745
9, Great Newport Street.]
8f> Voyages and Travel* ut America, S;c. [HlSTOBl
1762 Gioseppidi S.Teresa (Gio,) lstoria delle Guerre del regno d
Bnisile acradute tra la corona di Portogallo, e !« Republics
di Olanda, maps and plates, £1 5s fol. Rom. 1698
1763 Godwyn (M.) Trade preferr'd before Religion, and Christ
inade to give place to Mammon, a Sermon relating to the
Plantations, 3s 6d . 4to, 1685
1764 Gorges, America painted to tbe life. A History of the plan-
tations in those parts with the discoveries in New England,
all the parts, the map wanting, £1 Is 4to, 1658
1765 Gorges (F.) America pointed to the life; more especially an
absolute narrative of the north parts of tbe discoveries and
plantations in Virginia, New England, and Barbadoes, map,
all the several parts complete, £2 5s 4to, 1659
1766 Gould (G.) Observations on tbe Florida Kays, Reef, and
Gulf, Is 6d . . 410,1796
1767 Graham (J. A.") Descriptive Sketch of Vermont, 3s 6d 8vo,1797
1 768 Graves (J.) Memorial, or Account of the Bahama, Islands, 4s 6d
4to, 1708
1769 Graves (W.J Two Letters respecting the conduct of Rear Ad-
miral Graves in N. America, July to Nov. 1781, 5s
4 to, privately printed
1770 Gray (H.) Letters from Canada during a residence there, map,
half rvssia, 3s 6d . 8vo, 1809
1771 Grece (C. F.) Facts and Observations respecting Canada, and
the U, States, 2s 6d . 8vo, 1819
1772 Grievances of the American Colonies examined. Is 6d 8vo,1766
1773 Grynieus, NovusOrbis regionum ac insnlarum veteribns incog-
nitarum, une cum tabula cosmograpliica, et aliis consitnilis
argumenti lil.ellis, map, calf, 16s fol. Paris, 1532
*,* This volume contains the early traiels in the east, and the first vojagea to
1774 Grynaeus (S.) Novus Orbis regionum ac insularum, with a map,
16s . . fol. Basil. 1537
• t * The map in this edition il altogether different
important Grants conceded to the Eastern
1 America Company by the State of Guate-
mala, map, 2s 6d . 8vo, 1839
1776 Guiana. Descriptio regni Gnianas in America, per Gu alt he-
rum Raleghe equitem Auglum defectum, plates and maps,
the taller wanting a piece of the corner, 7s 6d 4to, 1599
1777 Guiana. Description of Surinam, very dirty, 3s 4to, 1667
1778 Guillermiu, Precis Historique des derniers evenemens de la
partie de Test de Saint-Domingue, 3s 6d Svo, Par. 1811
1779 Haliburton, Historical and Statistical Account of Nova Scotia.
map and plates, 2 vol. bds. 1 Os Svo, Halifax, N.S. ' '
[T. '
S. 1829
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in America, ttc. 87
1780 Halkett (J.) Historical Notes respecting the Indians of North
America, boards, 3s 6d . 8vo, 1825
1781 Hall (F.) Travels in Canada and the U. States, map, 3s 6d
8vo, 1819
1782 Hall (Hon. Judge) Letters from the West, 2s 6d 8vo, 1828
1783 Hamilton (A.) Reports read in the House of Representees of
the United States on Public Credit and Revenue, Is 6d
4to, 1795
1784 Hamilton (J. P.) Travels through the interior provinces of
Columbia, plates, 2 vol. boards, 4s 6d 8vo, 1827
1785 Review of (Hamilton's) Men and Manners in America, Is 6d 1834
1786 Hamor (R.) True Discourse of the present state of Virginia,
with a relation of the severall English townes and forts, the
christening of Powhatan's daughter, and her marriage with
an Englishman, rare, £2 16s 4to, 1615
1787 Hancock (J.) Observations on the climate, soil, and produc-
tions of British Guiana, 2s . 8vo, 1835
1788 Harcourt, Relation of a voyage to Guiana, describing the
climate, situation, fertilities and commodities of that country,
newly reviewed and enlarged, blue mor. £1 4s 4to, 1626
1789 Hariot (T.) Admiranda Narratio de commodis et incolarum
ritibus Virginiee nuper admodum ab Anglis anno 1585 in-
vented, with a series of curious engravings representing the
manners and customs of the native Indians, green morocco,
gilt leaves, £2 8s . fol. Franc. 1590
1790 Harper (R. G.) Observations on the N. American Land Company
lately instituted in Philadelphia, 2s 6d 8vo, 1796
1791 Harper (R. G.) Speech on the foreign intercourse Bill, Is 6d
8vo, 1798
1792 Harper (R. G.) Observations on the Dispute between the
United States and France, Is 6d 8vo, 1798
1793 Harrison (D.) Narrative of his distressful voyage and miracu-
lous deliverance on his voyage to New York. 2s 6d 8vo,l 766
1794 Hartley (D.) Letters on the American War, 3s 4to, 1778
1795 Hartley (D.) Letters on the American War, Is 6d 8vo, 1779
1796 Hartley (D.) Address to the Committee of the county of York
on public affairs, is 6d . 8vo, 1781
1797 Havana, Journal of the Siege of the, plan, Is 6d 8vo, 1762
1798 Hawkins (Sir Richard) Observations in his Voyage into the
South Sea, 1590, original vellum binding, g. t. £1 8s 1622
1799 Hearne (S.) Journey from Hudson's Bay to the Northern Ocean,
maps and plates, 9s . 4to, 1795
1800 Hennepin, Nouvelle Decouverte d'un tres grand pays dans
1'Amerique, entre le Nouveau Mexique et le Mer Glaciale,
maps and plates, 7s 6d . 12mo
1801 Hennepin, New Discovery of a vast country in America be-
tween new France and new Mexico, plates, including a view
of the falls of Niagara, the first taken (wanting the maps),
4s 6d . • 8vo, 1698
9, Great Newport Street.]
Voyage* and Trot
; be. [Historical
1802 Hennepin, Nouvuau Voyage d'un pais plus grand que I 'Europe,
maps and plates, 6s 12mo, Vlrteht, 1698
1803 Heriot (G.) Travels through (he Canadas (valuable account of
the Indiana, and Vocabulary of the Algonquin tongue),
platen, % . . 4lo, 1807
1804 Hernandez (F.) Plautarum Animalium, Miaeralium Mexica-
norum Historia, a N. A. Recchio, in ordinem digests,
J. T. Lynceo, cuts, 12s . fol. Roma, 1651
1805 HERREKA, Historia de los liechos de los Castellanos en las
islas y tierra firtne del mar uceano, 4 vol. c Huh: stained, £'2
fol. Mad. lfiOl
1806 Herrera (A. de) History of America, trans, by J. Stevens,
6 vol. calf, £1 15s . 8vo, 1725
1807 Herrera, Novus Orbis, sive Descriptio Indite Occidentals,
accesserunt et oliorum India; Occidentals Descriptiones,
et Navigations nupera; Australia Jac. Le Maire Hi.strtria,
maps a?id plates, 14s . fol. Amst. 1622
1808 Hickeringill, Jamaica viewed, map, 4s 6d 12mo, 1661
1809 Hilton, Discovery on the coast of Florida, giving account of
the nature and temper of the sojl, manners and dispositions
of the natives, &c. scarce, 18s . 4lo, 1664
1810 Hilliard d'Aubertueil, Considerations sur I'ebit present de la
Colonie de Saint-Domingut, 2 vol. 4s 8vo, Pur. 1776
1811 Historical account of all the British Colonies in N. America.
mop, 3s . . 12.nr>, Dublin, 1776
1812 History of the British Dominions in North America, map, 10s
4to, 1773
1813 History of the War in America, between Great Britain and
her colonies, 2 vol. wanting the map, 4s 6d 8vo, Dub. 1779
1814 Historische und Politische Betrachtungen uber die Colonien
besondcrsiu ruchsichtauf die I'-ng-liscb-Ameriliaiiisr.heii. 2s 6d
8vo, Bern, 1779
1815 Hobart f J. H.) The United States of America compared with
some European Countries, particularly England, Is 6d
8vo, 1826
1816 Holdilch (It.) Emigrants Guide to the States of America, bds.
2s 6d . . . 8vo, 1818
1817 Hollingsworth (S.) present state of Nova Scotia, with a brut
account of Canada, 3s 6d . 8vo, Edin. 1787
1818 Hollingsworth's Nova Scotia. Edin. 1768— Cooper's Informa-
tion respecting America. 1794, I vol. 5s 6d 8vo
1819 Holmes (A.) American Annals; or a chronological History of
America, from 1492 to 1806, 2 vol. boards, 5s 8vo, 1813
1820 Holroyd (John. Lord Sheffield! Observations on the Commerce
of the American States, 2s 6d . 8vo, 1784
1821 Honduras. Answer to the King of Spain's last manifesto re-
specting the Hay of Honduras and t£e Mosquito shore, 2s
S * ' 8,0.1779
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in America, fyc. 89
1822 Defence of the Settlers of Honduras against the representations
of Col. Arthur, Is 6d . 8vo, 1824
1823 Honduras Almanack for 1827, Is 6d 8vo, Belize, 1827
1824 Hooker (T.) A survey of the summe of Church discipline,
whrein the way of the churches of New- England is warranted
out of the Word, 1648 — Cotton's, of Boston, Way of Con-
gregational Churches cleared, 1648; 1 vol. 10s 6d 4to
1825 Remarks upon Gen. Howe's account of his proceedings on Long
Island, Is 6d . . 8vo, 1778
1826 Letter to Lord Howe on his naval conduct in the American
War, Is 6d . . 8vo, 1779
1827 Howe (Sir W.) Narrative relative to his conduct during his com-
mand of the king's troops in N. America, 2s 6d 4to, 1780
1828 Howe. Reply to the Observations of Sir W. Howe on a Pam-
phlet entitled Letters to a Nobleman, 2s 8vo, 1781
1829 Howe. Three Letters to Lieut-Gen. Sir William Howe, map,
Is 6d . . . 8vo, 1781
1830 Howison (J.) Sketches of Upper Canada, bds. 3s 8vo, 1821
1831 Hubbard (W.) The present state of New-England, being a
Narrative of the troubles with the Indians from 1607 to 1677,
map, 18s . 4to, 1677
1832 Hubbard's Present state of New-England, wanting the map, 6s
4to, 1677
1833 Hughes (G.) Natural History of Barbados, plates, binding
broken, 10s 6d . fol. 1750
1834 Hughes (W.) The American Physitian, or a Treatise of Roots,
Plants, Trees, &c. poor copy, 4s 12mo, 1672
1835 Humboldt (A. de) Essai Politique sur le Royaume de Nouvelle
Espagne, 5 vol. sewed, £1 15s 8vo, Paris, 1811
1836 Humphreys (D.) Poem on the Happiness of America, Is 6d 4to
1837 Hunter (J. D.) Memoirs of a captivity among the Indians of
N. America, boards, 4s 8vo, 1833
1838 Husk (— ) The present state of N. America, map, 3s 6d
* 4to, 1755
1839 Hutchinson (Governor, and Gen. Oliver) Letters, and remarks
thereon, 2s . . 8vo, 1774
1840 Imlay (G.) Topographical description of the Western Terri-
tory in N. America, 2s 6d . 8vo, 1792
1841 Importance of the British Plantations in America, 2s8vo,1731
1842 Proposals for a Society for Civilization of Indians within the
British Boundary, Is • 8vo, 1806
1843 Proceedings of the Friends Committee of Pennsylvania, &c.
for civilization of the Indian natives, 2s 8vo, 1806
1844 Proceedings of Friends in Baltimore for civilization of Indians,
ls6d . • 8vo, 1806
1845 Inga ( Athanasius) West-Indische Spieghel waer inne men sien
kan alle de Eylanden, Provintien Lautscbappen, hot machtige
ryck van Mexico, en't gout en silver-rycke landt van Peru,
maps and plates, 9s • 4to, Amst. 1624
9, Great Newport Street] n
Voy&get mid Teaoth in America, $c. [Histc
M
IA4S Inquiry into tbe past and present Relations of France and the
V. States, la 6d . 8vo, 1811
184/ True Interest of G. B, with regard to her American Colonies,
Is 6d . . 8vo, 1766
1848 Ilnrbide (Aug. de) Statement of events in his public Life, 2s
8vo, 1824
1849 Jackson (W.) Constitutions of the States of America, caff, 5s6d
8vo, 1783
1850 Jamaica. Journal of tie late proi-eedingsof (In; English Army
in tbe West Indies (first Inking of Jamaica), 3s (id 4to. 1655
1851 Case .d' the Island of Jamaica, Is fol. shut, 1712
1852 Jamaica, u History of from the earliest accounts, inapt, 4s
8vo, 1740
1853 Jamaica. Appeal to tbe Public on behalf of S Viiiigluui, Esq.
U6d . . Svo, 1770
1854 Jamaica. Report from the House of Assembly tm (be Expor-
tation of Sugar, &c. U . . fol. 1814
1855 Jefferson(T.)Noteso«tbestateoi'Vir S inia,/ji«p,6 8 8vo, 1787
1856 Correspondence between Jefferson and Hammond on the non-
execution of Treaties. &c. Is6d 8ko, 1794
1857 Jefferys' Voyages from Asia to America for completing tbe dis-
coveries of the N. W. coast of America, m-ips, 4a 6d 4lo, 1761
1858 Jefferys (T.) Description of tbe Spanish Settlements in tk
West Indies, maps, 6s . 4to, 1762
1859 JefferyB, West India Atlas, 7s . fol. 1775
HWSO JcfVi t-\s, American Alius, on forty '-nine platen, 14s fol. 1776
1861 Jenyns (S.) Miscellaneous Pieces (.objections to the taxation of
our American colonies by the legislature of G. Britain con-
sidered, Sic), 2s 6d . 8vo, 1770
1862 Jeune (P. le) Relation de ce qui s'est passe en la Nouvellc
Prance en 1 annee 1 633, 7s Svo, Par. 1634
1863 Johnson (C.) History of tbe I'yrates,2 vol. plates, 10s 6d
8vo, 1726
1864 Johnson (Dr. S-Vfiiouglits on the late transactions respecting
Falkland's Islands, Is 6d Hvo, Nao York, 1771
1865 Johnson, Taxation no Tyranny ; in answer to the Resolutions
of the American Congress, Is 6d 8vo, 1775
1866 Josselyn (J.) New- England's Rarities discovered in Birds,
Beasts, Fishes. Serpen! s, and Plants of that country ; also,
description of au Indian Squa, 10s fid 12mo, 1672
1867 Journal of Proceedings of tbe Protestant Episcopal Church
in United States, a.d. 1811, with three other Tracts relating
to tbe same, 4s . . 8vo, 181 1-1828
J868 Juan and Ulloa's Voyage to S. America, describing the Spanish
Cities, Towns, Provinces, &c. with notes and observations by
J. Adams, 2 vol. cnlf. 5s Svo, 1772
1S69 Justamond, History of the settlement and trade of the Europeans
in the East and West Indies, 4 vol. calf, 8s
Svo, 1776
■■
.ITBR&TU11E.] Voyage* and Tratttt in America.
Justice and Necessity of taxing the British Colonies demon-
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[T. R(.i>t«.
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in America, fyc. 95
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2067 Pizarro (F.) Varones Illustres del Nuevo Mundo, 16s
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2068 Plan of Peace with America. . S'se Noteby Isaac fleerf, ls8vo,1778
2069 Plan of Re-union between G. Britain and her Colonies, 2s 6d
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2070 Plans of Forts in America, reduced from actual surveys, 4s 6d
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2071 Plantation Laics. Abridgment of the Laws in force in Virgi-
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2073 Piatt (F,bene/er Smith) Argument in the case of, confined for
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2074 Political Essavs concerning the present state of the British £m-
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2081 Pownall (T.) Topographical Description of the Middle Col...
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20S2 Poyer (J.) History of Barbados, boards, 5s 4 to, 1 SOS
2083 Poyntz (JO Present Prospect of the fertile Island of Tobago,
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2084 Poyntz (J.) The present Prospect of the famous and fertile
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2086 Pradt (M. de) Les troii dernier moil de l'Amerique e
Bresil, Is
Svo, 1817
[T.
■o, 1817
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in America, §c. 101
2087 De Pradt, des Colonies, et de la Revolution Actuelle de
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2088 Pradt (M. de) The Colonies and the present American Revo-
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2100 Prior Documents. A collection of papers relative to the dis-
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2108 Polteney (W.) Thoughts on the present State of Affairs with
America, 2s . 8vo, 1778
9, Great Newport Street.'}
Voyages and Travels in Ameru
[Histoi
2109 R***«»* (Maria) Voyages to the Madeira and Leeward Ca-
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2110 Ramsford (M.) Account of the Black Empire of Hayti, princi-
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LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in America, fyc. 103
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2135 Robson (J.) Account of Six Years' residence in Hudson's Bay,
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2172 Smith (W.) Oration in Memory of General Montgomery and
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[T.
*J2
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in America, $c. 105
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Voyages and Trawls in America, o)c [HISTORIC.
. 18a
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|T. Roiin,
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in America, $c. 107
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2215 Prince's Thanksgiving Sermon at Boston, 1749 — The Apostles
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108 Voyages and TfomU hi America, &Z. [HISTORICAL
(lii^ Northern Colonics, 1764 — Justice ami Policy of Act
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^219 Speech of J. Dickinson, Phil. 1764— Speech of Galloway, ib.
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[T. Rodd,
LITERATURE.] Voyages and Travels in America, $c. 109
— Appeal to the World, or a Vind. of the town of Boston,
1770 — Observations of the Merchants at Boston npon
sevend Acts of Parliament, 1770 — Pownall's Administration
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inson, Oliver, &c.; with Remarks, 1774 — Tucker's Five
Tracts, 1775 — Burke on American Taxation, 1774 — Ship-
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Querist, 1774 — Friendly Address to all reasonable Ameri-
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2224 Shipley's Speech intended, &c. 1774— -Burke on American
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Bay; I vol. 10s 6d . 8vo, 1774-76
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1 10 Voyage* and Travels m America, §c. [HISTORICAL
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2228 Price*! Observations on the nature of Civil Liberty and Justice
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2230 Evidence on the Petition presenter! by the West India Planters
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2232 Burnaby (A.) Travels through the Middle Settlements of N
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2233 Massachusetts 1 1 sis. A Series of Lettres on the troubles in
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fT. Kodd,
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2243 Tucker (G.) Life o!' Thomas Jelferwn, third President of the
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2244 Tucker (J.) Letter from a Merchant in London to his uepbew
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2245 Tucker (J.. Dean of Gloucester) Tracts |on American affairs.
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